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  • v.5(2); 2016 May 8

Systematic review of character development and childhood chronic illness

Correspondence to: Gary R Maslow, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor, Departments of Pediatrics, Duke University School of Medicine, DUMC 2906, Durham, NC 27710, United States. [email protected]

Telephone: +1-919-7975363 Fax: +1-919-6684496

AIM: To review empirical evidence on character development among youth with chronic illnesses.

METHODS: A systematic literature review was conducted using PubMed and PSYCHINFO from inception until November 2013 to find quantitative studies that measured character strengths among youth with chronic illnesses. Inclusion criteria were limited to English language studies examining constructs of character development among adolescents or young adults aged 13-24 years with a childhood-onset chronic medical condition. A librarian at Duke University Medical Center Library assisted with the development of the mesh search term. Two researchers independently reviewed relevant titles ( n = 549), then abstracts ( n = 45), and finally manuscripts ( n = 3).

RESULTS: There is a lack of empirical research on character development and childhood-onset chronic medical conditions. Three studies were identified that used different measures of character based on moral themes. One study examined moral reasoning among deaf adolescents using Kohlberg’s Moral Judgement Instrument; another, investigated moral values of adolescent cancer survivors with the Values In Action Classification of Strengths. A third study evaluated moral behavior among young adult survivors of burn injury utilizing the Tennessee Self-Concept, 2 nd edition. The studies observed that youth with chronic conditions reasoned at less advanced stages and had a lower moral self-concept compared to referent populations, but that they did differ on character virtues and strengths when matched with healthy peers for age, sex, and race/ethnicity. Yet, generalizations could not be drawn regarding character development of youth with chronic medical conditions because the studies were too divergent from each other and biased from study design limitations.

CONCLUSION: Future empirical studies should learn from the strengths and weaknesses of the existing literature on character development among youth with chronic medical conditions.

Core tip: This study reviewed empirical evidence on character development among youth with chronic medical conditions. Only three quantitative studies were found that met the review inclusion criteria. Different measures of character were evaluated including moral reasoning, moral concept, and character virtues. Collectively, the findings were not generalizable and were too divergent to support or contradict each other. The strengths and weaknesses of the emerging literature offer insights into how best to design future studies on character development among youth with chronic illnesses.

INTRODUCTION

As more and more adolescents with chronic illness survive into adulthood it is vital that we understand how best to support their development into thriving adults. The study of chronic illness in adolescence has been approached from many aspects of development including social development, emotional development, and cognitive development[ 1 , 2 ]. Yet, little is known about the Positive Youth Development (PYD) of these youth which focuses on the development of strengths in adolescence that is associated with positive outcomes[ 3 ].

PYD, as described by Richard M Lerner, PhD, is a model that has been validated using a global measure and sub-constructs consisting of Five C’s: Character, caring, connectedness, competence, and confidence (Table ​ (Table1 1 )[ 4 , 5 ]. All six factors are stable measures across developmental stages from childhood to adulthood and are modifiable based on experiences and environmental resources[ 6 - 8 ]. Youth with higher scores for PYD and the Five C’s have higher contribution to society and lower rates of problem behaviors and depression[ 6 ]. Accordingly, many youth programs that have been designed to improve outcomes target character development defined by personal standards, moral behavior, or personal strengths ( e.g ., diligence)[ 9 , 10 ].

Definitions of the five C’s of positive youth development[ 4 ]

CompetencePositive view of one’s actions in domain specific areas including social, academic, cognitive, and vocational. Social competence pertains to interpersonal skills ( ., conflict resolution). Cognitive competence pertains to cognitive abilities ( ., decision making). School grades, attendance, and test scores are part of academic competence. Vocational competence involves work habits and career choice explorations
Confidence connectionAn internal sense of overall positive self-worth and self-efficacy; one’s global self-regard, as opposed to domain specific beliefs. Positive bonds with people and institutions that are reflected in bidirectional exchanges between the individual and peers, family, school, and community in which both parties contribute to the relationship
CharacterRespect for societal and cultural rules, possession of standards for correct behaviors, a sense of right and wrong (morality), and integrity
Caring and compassionA sense of sympathy and empathy for others

For youth with chronic illnesses, a strong character is commonly acknowledged as an essential trait given the persistent health challenges they face[ 7 , 8 ]. Anecdotally there are many stories which attest to the strength of children living with chronic medical conditions. To quote one such newspaper article describing a 15 years old with cancer: “(She) has been a symbol of courage and strength for those who know her[ 11 ].” Similar sentiments and accounts of character growth due to the illness experience were noted in qualitative interviews that we conducted of adolescents with chronic conditions and their parents (unpublished data).

However, rigorous empirical research on character development among adolescents with chronic illnesses is in a nascent state. Key questions remain as to whether or not character development is different for youth with chronic medical conditions and what specific attributes of character should be targeted for interventions. To answer these inquiries, there are a variety of theoretical frameworks, research study designs, methods ( i.e ., measures and approaches), and statistical techniques that can be used. Also, the influence of the disease state-type, onset, severity, and prognosis - must be taken into consideration. In addition, thought has to be given to the developmental stage of interest to select the most appropriate evaluation. Given the complexity, emerging quantitative research on this topic has the potential to be varied and divergent.

Accordingly, the aim of this study was to conduct a systematic review of studies investigating character development among adolescents and young adults with chronic medical conditions. Our objectives were to synthesize the existing empirical research and provide recommendations for future directions. We sought to find quantitative research that measured character, moral development, or moral behavior to be consistent with Lerner’s PYD definition[ 4 ]. To identify character traits across different diseases, we utilized a non-categorical approach for childhood chronic illnesses.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Search terms.

The mesh search term was created by a librarian at Duke University Medical Center Library, combining words related to character development, chronic conditions, and childhood.

Character development: Positive youth development, character development, personality development, altruism, character, empathy, integrity, conscientiousness, courage, social values, virtues, emotional maturity, loyalty, moral, open-mindedness, sincerity

Chronic conditions: Diabetes, cancer, epilepsy, seizures, neoplasms, inflammatory bowel disease, crohns disease, ulcerative colitis, asthma, burns, headaches, cerebral palsy, deafness, blindness, hemophilia, celiac disease, migraine disorders, HIV, neurofibromatosis, sickle cell disease, anemia, obesity, congenital heart disease, cystic fibrosis, spina bifida, hemophilia, muscular dystrophy, chronic illness, chronic disease.

Childhood: Pediatric, adolescent, adolescence, teen, teenager, child, youth.

Data sources

The contents of the PubMed and PSYCHINFO databases were searched from inception through November 2013. References of relevant publications were also reviewed to identify additional titles. The searches were limited to English language publications with participants 13-24 years of age. The full search strategy is available from the corresponding author.

Study selection

Two reviewers independently reviewed all titles produced by the initial searches ( n = 549) and excluded those that were definitively irrelevant to the search intent. Any titles which were insufficiently clear to make such a determination were retained for review at the abstract level. All of the remaining abstracts ( n = 45) were then independently screened for the following inclusion criteria: (1) population of children or adolescents up to 21 years of age with a chronic condition; and (2) examined some aspect of character development. Those meeting the criteria were included in the study. Figure ​ Figure1 1 provides a PRISMA flowchart depicting the number of publications included and excluded at each stage of review[ 12 ]. Biostatistics were not used for sampling purposes, summarization of the data, analysis, interpretation, or inference. The statistical methods of this study were reviewed by Sherika N Hill, PhD from Duke University and deemed appropriate for a systematic literature review.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is WJCP-5-206-g001.jpg

PRISMA flow diagram[ 12 ]. For search of PubMed and PSYCHINFO databases using mesh search terms for character development, chronic conditions, and childhood. N/A: Not applicable.

Three studies were identified that met inclusion criteria and examined character development among participants with childhood-onset chronic conditions[ 13 - 15 ]. Two studies found lower scores indicative of character deficiencies for individuals with chronic conditions compared to normative samples while one study found adolescents with a chronic condition to be similar in character to healthy peers matched by age and sex[ 13 - 15 ]. All of the studies were prospective, observational, cross-sectional, survey-based, and informed by self-report. However, they differed in their designs (type of comparison group), methods (samples, recruitment, measures, survey administration), and analyses (statistical approaches).

The study findings are summarized in Table ​ Table2. 2 . The first study by Sam and Wright[ 15 ] (1988) examined moral reasoning among 15 deaf adolescents as compared to population norms using modified versions of dilemmas from Kohlberg’s Moral Judgment Instrument. Deaf adolescents’ moral reasoning was more basic (Stage 1 and 2 of the Pre-conventional Level) compared to advanced stages of reasoning (Stages 2, 3 or 4 of Conventional Level) of the referent group[ 15 ]. In the second study, Guse and Eracleous[ 13 ] (2011) compared responses to the Values in Action Inventory Classification of Character Strengths for Youth of 21 adolescent cancer survivors to healthy peers matched on age, sex and race/ethnicity[ 13 ]. There was no difference in scores between groups on the 5 character virtues and 15 character strengths tested. Russell et al[ 14 ] (2013) conducted a third study that examined moral self-concept among 82 young adults who were burn survivors from childhood using the Tennessee Self-Concept Scale 2 nd edition. The burn survivors had a significantly lower score ( P = 0.036) on the Moral Sub-scale compared to a reference population[ 14 ].

Summary of studies measuring character development of youth with chronic conditions

Sam et al[ ]15DeafKohlberg Moral Judgment InstrumentMoral reasoning for deaf participants was at a lower/basic stage of development compared to norms
Ages 12-15 yr
Guse et al[ ]4221 cancer survivorsValues in Action Inventory for YouthNo difference in mean scores
21 healthy peers
Matched on age, race, and gender
Ages 12-19 yr (mean = 16 yr)
Russell et al[ ]85Burn survivorsTennessee Self-Concept scale - Moral subscaleScores on moral subscale lower than norms ( = 0.036). Subscale includes moral identity, satisfaction, and behavior
Ages 18-30 yr (mean = 21 yr)

The emerging research on character development among youth with chronic medical conditions is too disparate to draw conclusions. There were only three studies that met our search criteria dating back to the inception of PubMed and PSYCHINFO. Each study used a different measure of character which did not overlap in how they operationalized moral themes. Further, the social context of the study participants varied greatly from young deaf adolescents, to Australian cancer survivors, to adult burn survivors. Lastly, study design limitations such as small convenience samples further limited generalizability. Consequently, the results from the studies neither supported nor contradicted one another in advancing our understanding of character development among youth with chronic conditions.

Nonetheless, future studies can learn from the strengths and weaknesses of the emerging evidence. To operationalize character, different measures of moral development were examined. The Kohlberg Moral Judgement Instrument ranked beliefs regarding social norms while the Values In Action Classification of Strength for Youth (VIA-Youth) tallied virtues pertaining to universal constructs of goodness and the Tennessee Self-Concept (TSC) Scale scored perceived self-control[ 13 - 15 ].

The Kohlberg Instrument proposes that there are stages of progressive moral reasoning that ascend from an egocentric to altruistic sense of fairness[ 16 ]. A key strength of this character assessment is that moral development is presented as a continuum that can evolve as an individual ages, matures, or have critical experiences. Accordingly, the tool would be useful to track changes in moral reasoning over time. Researchers should be cautious, however, in interpreting results. For one, it is not clear if a lower, basic stage of moral reasoning represents a character deficit, developmental delay, or a lack of life experience. Secondly, critics question whether youth can fully appreciate the relationship dynamics presented in scenarios that are: (1) purely fictional in nature; and (2) have mature themes such as spousal or parental love[ 17 ]. Thirdly, scholars argue that Kohlberg’s instrument is gender-biased because the moral reasoning stages are derived from an all-male sample, resulting in lower scores for females[ 18 ]. Consequently, given that more than half of Sam and Wright subjects were female, sex differences instead of disease influences may offer a better explanation as to why deaf children had a lower stage of moral reasoning compared to instrument norms[ 15 ].

The VIA-Youth also has noteworthy merits and shortcomings to guide future research. The tool was designed to be comprehensive, gender-neutral, and cross-culturally relevant in testing universal themes of good character virtues and strengths[ 19 ]. These features make the evaluation ideal for diverse samples and questions regarding personality traits. As a trade-off, however, the self-administered survey requires keen self-awareness to accurately score 198 items and takes more than 30 min to complete. Researchers should be aware that these features could be challenging for adolescents. Case in point, one could argue that cancer survivors and healthy peers scored similarly on the VIA-Youth in the Guse and Eracleou study, selecting all mid-point responses for most items, because adolescents in general lack introspection skills as a result of their developmental stage or that respondents suffered from testing fatigue given the long, intensive survey[ 13 , 19 , 20 ].

The TSC Scale is less demanding on respondents and provides specific targets for intervention as key strengths[ 14 ]. Moral Self-Concept in the TSC is very narrowly defined as personal satisfaction with one’s self-control[ 14 ]. Accordingly, lower scores such as those reported by Russell et al[ 14 ] suggest that interventions could target either burn survivors’ personal expectations or their internal self-regulation skills. A drawback to the TSC is that the instrument is not specific to adolescents. The reference population is 13-90 years old[ 14 ].

Collectively, the three studies highlight study design issues that should be addressed in future empirical studies. For instance, the study by Sam and Wright suggests that deaf children may experience a more pervasive form of isolation because of the specialized school environment[ 15 ]. To account for disease-specific influences, future studies should seek to have a healthy comparison group as well as comparison groups of different medical conditions. Moreover, future studies should choose sampling and analytical strategies a priori that either limit or control for systematic biases introduced by weakness in the study design and methods. Although Guse and Eracleous utilized a comparison group that was matched on age, sex, and race/ethnicity, they did not address the selection bias ( i.e ., study subjects who selected/chose to participate in study were different from the general population) that resulted from using a convenience sampling approach[ 13 ]. Finally, future research should assess character changes within and between individuals from childhood to adulthood to identify aberrant developmental effects. In doing so, the study by Russell et al[ 14 ] would have been more informative in delineating whether the low satisfaction scores were attributable to the chronic medical condition or the challenging experience of transitioning to adulthood.

In conclusion, this literature review sets the stage for future studies of character development among adolescents with chronic illnesses. More empirical evidence is needed to inform interventions and provide a better understanding of how adversity affects character development during adolescence in general. Building character strengths broadly, and moral development specifically, is important to ensure that adolescents thrive as they transition into adulthood.

As more adolescents with chronic illness survive into adulthood, it is vital to understand how best to support their development into thriving adults; however, little is known about the Positive Youth Development (PYD) of these youth which focuses on the development of strengths in adolescence.

Research frontiers

The study of chronic illness in adolescence has been approached from many aspects of development including social development, emotional development, and cognitive development. Given the persistent health challenges among youth with chronic illnesses, a strong character is commonly acknowledged as an essential trait among this population. However, rigorous empirical research on character development among adolescents with chronic illnesses is in a nascent state.

Applications

Collectively, the three studies included in this review highlight study design issues that should be addressed in future empirical studies. To account for disease-specific influences, future studies should seek to have a healthy comparison group as well as comparison groups of different medical conditions. Moreover, future studies should choose sampling and analytical strategies a priori that either limit or control for systematic biases introduced by weakness in the study design and methods.

Terminology

Positive Youth Development - a strengths-based perspective regarding the development and positive growth of adolescents and young adults.

Peer-review

The author conducted a systematic review to find character strengths among youth with chronic illness, found that there was no empirical research regarding this area of study, and proposed how to design future studies on this research.

Conflict-of-interest statement: Dr. Maslow and Dr. Hill declare no conflict of interest regarding this manuscript: “Systematic review of character development and childhood chronic illness.

Data sharing statement: No additional data are available.

Open-Access: This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

Peer-review started: August 28, 2015

First decision: December 4, 2015

Article in press: January 31, 2016

P- Reviewer: Watanabe T, Contreras CM S- Editor: Qi Y L- Editor: A E- Editor: Wang CH

National Academies Press: OpenBook

Approaches to the Development of Character: Proceedings of a Workshop (2017)

Chapter: 1 introduction, 1 introduction.

The development of character is a valued objective for many kinds of educational programs that take place both in and outside of school. Educators, parents, and others create and support structured programs and lessons that engage students in academics, sports, service, and other activities with the aim of developing or strengthening positive behaviors, attitudes, values, and attributes. Programs that pursue this kind of learning may describe what they do as character education; positive youth development; or the development of social and emotional learning, interpersonal and intrapersonal competencies, or noncognitive skills. These terms are not interchangeable, but there is overlap among them: They encompass a range of skills and attributes that students need to flourish in school, the workplace, and their personal lives, such as the capacity to manage their emotions, set and achieve positive goals, feel and show empathy, maintain positive relationships, and make sound decisions. This loosely defined set of skills and attributes is referred to in this document as “character.”

Educators and administrators who develop and run programs that seek to develop character recognize that the established approaches for doing so have much in common, and they are eager to learn about promising practices used in other settings, evidence of effectiveness, and ways to measure the effectiveness of their own approaches. The available research has been sparse and often focused only on one kind of character or development, but recent work has helped to identify commonalities in the literature that can advance understanding of how character might be defined and developed and how outcomes might be measured.

With the support of the S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation, the National

Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine held a workshop in July 2016 to review research and practice relevant to the development of character, with a particular focus on ideas that can support the adults who develop and run out-of-school programs. The Committee on Defining and Measuring Character and Character Education was appointed to plan the workshop. The charge to the committee—whose members have expertise in research and practice in character education, including research and program development directly related to character education, program evaluation and measurement, and cognitive and developmental psychology—is shown in Box 1-1 .

The committee recognized that there are many definitions of character and many ways of describing the objectives for programs that aim to help young people develop positive attributes. The committee members noted that while good character is in one sense easy to recognize—in people who are responsible, honorable, and emotionally healthy, for example—the words used to describe it may seem to imply stances on complex questions. For example, some people who study these issues use the tools of biology and psychology to understand individual differences, whereas others focus on questions of culture, gender, and power relationships to explore the roles young people are asked to emulate.

A thorough exploration of these complex issues was beyond the scope of the workshop. The committee focused on obtaining an overview of the available academic research and structuring discussions with presenters who reflected a variety of expertise and perspectives. The committee members had the goal of meeting the needs of practitioners, particularly those involved in out-of-school programs, and of encouraging researchers and practitioners to learn from one another. 1 The committee designed the workshop to explore four themes:

___________________

1 Because the workshop focused on out-of-school programs, the emphasis fell more on older children and adolescents than very young children.

  • defining and understanding character,
  • identifying what works in developing character,
  • implementing development strategies and evaluating outcomes, and
  • measuring character.

The committee commissioned eight papers (see Box 1-2 ) and planned sessions that allowed participants ample time to engage with the authors and one another, and to consider ways the material presented could apply in their own work. 2 Structured breakout sessions allowed participants to

2 The workshop agenda, a list of participants, and brief biographical sketches for the committee members and presenters can be found in Appendixes A , B , and C . The commissioned papers and an archived video of all sessions can be found at the project website, http://sites.nationalacademies.org/DBASSE/BOTA/DBASSE_171735 [September 2016].

reflect in detail on the ideas presented. ( Appendix D is a worksheet used in these sessions.)

This proceedings document, prepared by the workshop rapporteur, summarizes the presentations and discussions that took place. The planning committee’s role was limited to planning and convening the workshop. The views contained in this document are those of individual workshop participants and do not necessarily represent the views of all workshop participants, the planning committee, or the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.

This document follows the structure of the workshop. Chapter 2 is an overview of research on the nature of character and a discussion of themes that transcend its varied definitions. Chapter 3 summarizes a range of ideas on what practices and approaches are most effective in developing character, and Chapter 4 focuses on the importance of implementing program goals effectively and evaluating the results. Chapter 5 delves deeper into one key aspect of effective program implementation, a high-quality staff. Chapter 6 is an exploration of the technical challenges of measuring character. Chapter 7 summarizes individual participants’ perspectives on the primary workshop themes.

The development of character is a valued objective for many kinds of educational programs that take place both in and outside of school. Educators and administrators who develop and run programs that seek to develop character recognize that the established approaches for doing so have much in common, and they are eager to learn about promising practices used in other settings, evidence of effectiveness, and ways to measure the effectiveness of their own approaches.

In July 2016, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine held a workshop to review research and practice relevant to the development of character, with a particular focus on ideas that can support the adults who develop and run out-of-school programs. This publication summarizes the presentations and discussions from the workshop.

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Accelerating Progress: A New Era of Research on Character Development

Affiliations.

  • 1 John Templeton Foundation, West Conshohocken, PA, USA. [email protected].
  • 2 John Templeton Foundation, West Conshohocken, PA, USA.
  • PMID: 28470439
  • DOI: 10.1007/s10964-017-0681-9

Adolescent character development is a high priority for educators, policymakers, and front-line youth workers. To meet this growing demand, and as exemplified in the five articles in this special section, character development scholars are drawing from a range of academic disciplines to push beyond the traditional boundaries of the science of character development. These articles highlight important trends in character research, including the co-development of a subset of character strengths, the articulation of developmental trajectories of character, the use of advanced methodological approaches, and the implications for education. Studies such as these are critically important for establishing the research base that will be used to design the character development programs of tomorrow.

Keywords: Character development; Character education; Character strengths; Virtue.

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p-ISSN: 2162-9463    e-ISSN: 2162-8467

2019;  9(5): 81-86

doi:10.5923/j.edu.20190905.01

Student Character Development: Relationships, Resources, and Considerations

Michael D. Thompson 1 , Irving I. Epstein 2

1 Office of Institutional Research & Planning, Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, IL, USA

2 Department of Educational Studies, Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, IL, USA

Email:

Copyright © 2019 The Author(s). Published by Scientific & Academic Publishing.

This case study examination assessed the significant contributions of college resources regarding students’ character development within a liberal arts institutional setting. The effects of attributed contributions from various interactions and experiences are analyzed within the context of Astin’s [1] input-environment-outcome model. Data elements from student participants in their senior undergraduate year were utilized and extracted from merged longitudinal databases that included matching student responses from Student Information Forms (SIF) and College Senior Surveys (CSS), both instruments from the Higher Education Research Institute. The results of this case study confirmed many established results concerning student character development, yet also continue to raise questions regarding which institutional relationships and experiences have the greatest impact in contributing to its enhancement.

Keywords: College Students, Character Development, Liberal Arts

Cite this paper: Michael D. Thompson, Irving I. Epstein, Student Character Development: Relationships, Resources, and Considerations, Education , Vol. 9 No. 5, 2019, pp. 81-86. doi: 10.5923/j.edu.20190905.01.

Article Outline

1. introduction and literature review, 2. methodology, 2.1. participants and procedure, 2.2. instruments, 2.3. variables and design.

Means, Standard Deviations and Pearson Correlations of Predictors
Student Character Development Coefficients
     

4. Discussion & Conclusions

5. limitations, appendix a: content of multiple item scales.

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HYPOTHESIS AND THEORY article

The practice of character strengths: unifying definitions, principles, and exploration of what’s soaring, emerging, and ripe with potential in science and in practice.

Ryan M. Niemiec

  • 1 VIA Institute on Character, Cincinnati, OH, United States
  • 2 Other, Cincinnati, OH, United States

What does it mean to be “strengths-based” or to be a “strengths-based practitioner?” These are diffuse areas that are generic and ill-defined. Part of the confusion arises from the customary default of practitioners and leaders across many cultures to label anything positive or complimentary as “strengths-based,” whether that be an approach, a theoretical orientation, an intervention, or a company. Additional muddle is created by many researchers and practitioners not making distinctions between very different categories of “strength” in human beings – strengths of character, of talent/ability, of interest/passion, of skill/competency, to name a few. To add clarity and unification across professions, we offer seven characteristics and a comprehensive definition for a character strengths-based practitioner. We center on the type of strength referred to as character strengths and explore six guiding principles for understanding character strengths (e.g., character is plural; character is being and doing) and their practical corollaries. Reflecting this foundation and based on character strengths research, our longstanding work with strengths, discussions with practitioners across the globe, and a practitioner survey asking about strength practices ( N = 113), we point out several character strengths practices or approaches we describe as soaring (e.g., explore and encourage signature strengths; practice strengths-spotting), emerging (e.g., the integration of mindfulness and character strengths), or ripe with potential (e.g., phasic strengths; the tempering effect; the towing effect). We use the same framework for describing general research domains. Some areas of research in character strengths are soaring with more than 25 studies (e.g., workplace/organizations), some are emerging with a handful of studies (e.g., health/medicine), and others are ripe with potential that have none or few studies yet opportunity looms large for integrating character science (e.g., peace/conflict studies). Using this framework, we seek to advance the exchange and collaboration between researcher and practitioner, as well as to advance the science and practice of character strengths.

Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Willing is not enough; we must do. ‐ Goethe

Introduction

Over 700 studies on the VIA Classification published in the last 10 years; over 15 million surveys administered ( VIA Institute, 2021 ); steeply increasing annual usage of the VIA Survey: all reflect a unique precedence of both scholarship and popularity around advancing the science and practice of character strengths. Despite being a young science, there is substantial scientific grounding for practitioners educating and guiding clients. At the same time, the large number of practitioners across the globe applying character strengths presents an opportunity for researchers to explore gaps in the science and practice and continue to advance the work. This is the quintessential bridge between academia’s ivory tower and the practitioner or consumer on main street; it is the dialogue between science and practice.

Myriad definitions of character strengths exist in the literature (e.g., Peterson et al., 2005 ) and a minimalist definition from the original VIA Classification text states they are the routes to the great virtues ( Peterson and Seligman, 2004 ). A more comprehensive definition that sums up the array of cultural, practical, and scientific approaches states: Character strengths are positive personality traits that reflect our basic identity, produce positive outcomes for ourselves and others, and contribute to the collective good ( Niemiec, 2018 ). Said another way, the VIA Classification of character strengths is a consensual nomenclature ( Peterson and Seligman, 2004 ), a “common language” to understand what is best in human beings.

Character strengths have been studied across industries (e.g., business/organizations, education, healthcare), professions (e.g., physicians), application areas (e.g., youth, disability), areas of well-being (e.g., mental health, happiness, positive relationships), valued outcomes (e.g., achievement, stress management), and domains of life (e.g., parenting); see VIA Institute (2021) for summaries of the studies in the science of character. One would be hard-pressed to find an area in psychology that has neither some research on character strengths being discussed nor the strong potential for so doing. In part, the recent theory suggests, character strengths are relevant for the full range of human experiences – positive opportunities, as well as adversities and suffering, and the mundane in-between ( Niemiec, 2020 ). Despite the large volume of studies, there remains far more to discover about the practice of character strengths. We attempt here to highlight what we see as patterns or trends in the practice of character strengths.

As we turn to examine strengths-based practices, we intentionally loosely define practitioner as any helping professional, such as a psychologist, counselor, social worker, mentor, coach, manager, supervisor, teacher, physician, nurse, health technician, mediator, or professor. Similarly, we loosely define client as any person being helped or supported, such as a patient, counseling client, coaches, student, employee, or the general consumer. In addition, we will use the term “character strengths” to refer specifically to the 24 character strengths of the VIA Classification (which is the substantial focus of the scientific literature on strengths), while the term “strengths” will refer to the more generic frame of some kind of positive quality. Some studies do not specify the type of strength being investigated, thus, in those cases that lack clarity, we use the term “strengths.”

What Really Is a Strengths-Based Practice?

In querying thousands of practitioners in workshops across spheres of application (e.g., workplace, education, coaching, counseling) if they are a strengths-based practitioner or have a strengths-based practice, the majority answer “yes.” Then when asked to share what they mean by “strengths-based,” the range of responses is almost as varied as the number of people asked. Unfortunately, “strengths” and “strengths-based” have become so generic in their use that in many cases they have become lackluster and meaningless. This trend is only increasing. Yet, the value of strengths is significant and warrants clear definitions and characteristics of strengths-based practices.

Integration of strengths into practice has been discussed for more than two decades and spans many fields, such as social work ( Saleebey, 1996 ), counseling ( Smith, 2006 ), psychotherapy ( Rashid and Seligman, 2018 ), mindfulness ( Niemiec, 2014 ), organizations ( Cooperrider and Whitney, 2005 ), project management (Pearce), disability ( Niemiec et al., 2017 ), personal/executive coaching ( Foster and Auerbach, 2015 ), and education ( Linkins et al., 2015 ). There is not one pathway, model, or theoretical orientation for describing a strengths-based approach or one set of applications for a strengths-based practice. These are unique to each practitioner and infused into their existing approach as a helping professional. However, we believe there are unifying and relevant characteristics of strengths-based approaches applicable across professions.

A first step is to offer specificity on the type of strengths (discussed later) being examined (i.e., strengths of talent or intelligence are different from strengths of character in definition, malleability, and scope). Therefore, our focus is on character strengths. We suggest, based on a review of hundreds of studies on character strengths ( VIA Institute, 2021 ), discussions with strengths-based practitioners across the globe and our own practices with character strengths, that a practitioner taking a character strengths-based approach employs the following seven elements:

• Embodies character strength : the practitioner serves as a role model for character strengths use thus displays character strengths awareness and use as they interact and practice.

• Educates on strengths : the practitioner teaches about strengths, explains rationale and importance, corrects misconceptions (e.g., strengths are Pollyannaish or happiology; strengths involve ignoring weaknesses), and offers pathways forward for character strengths use.

• Energizes : uplifts and fuels the person out of autopilot tendencies, entrapped mental and behavioral routines, and strengths blindness ( Biswas-Diener et al., 2011 ) patterns.

• Empowers : focuses on character strengths to help people move from what’s wrong to what’s strong and/or helps them use what’s strong to overcome what’s wrong.

• Faces adversity : acknowledges problems and struggles – and when appropriate for the context/relationship, explores them but does not get lost in them, nor allows the positive to be squashed out.

• Connects : a character strengths-based approach engenders connections – helping the person become more connected with others, with the world, and particularly with themselves. This strengths connection naturally extends to the practitioner-client dyad.

• Cultivates seeds : a character strengths-based approach offers an orientation of cultivating seeds, not just plucking weeds (the negative). Rather than a prescriptive approach, the descriptive language around character strengths is prioritized to build awareness, to explore, and to help the client grow toward positive action ( Niemiec, 2014 ; Linkins et al., 2015 ).

We propose that these seven action-focused characteristics are essential for an authentic character strengths-based approach. They are central attributes of a practitioner’s mindset. Other beneficial characteristics could be named – such as being goal-oriented or holistic – however, these may not be aligned with certain professions or theoretical orientations. It’s important to understand that any approach, theoretical orientation, or model can be infused with character strengths, and the preceding characteristics can support that, from solution-focused and executive coaching protocols to cognitive-behavioral and psychodynamic orientations to humanistic and social-emotional learning approaches ( Niemiec, 2018 ). As a single unifying definition for a character strengths-based approach (or a generic “strengths-based approach”), we offer the following:

A character strengths-based approach (or practice) is empowering, energizing, and connecting in which practitioners, in their own uniquely personal way and with their own orientation/approach to helping, embody and exhibit their character strengths as they educate clients on strengths and support clients in cultivating their character strengths for boosting well-being and handling adversity.

Character Strengths Principles

In order to operationalize this definition and its many elements, we next offer a framework of six core principles for strengths-based practitioners to understand and deepen their work. A related, practical corollary accompanies each principle. These are adapted from Niemiec (2018) .

Character Strengths Are Capacities

Character strengths are viewed as capacities for thinking, feeling, and behaving ( Park et al., 2004 ; Peterson and Seligman, 2004 ). In practical terms, we can think creatively and fairly and have grateful and prudent thoughts; we can feel love, kindness, hope, and humility in our body; and we can behave in ways that are brave, zestful, honest, and forgiving ( Niemiec, 2018 ).

A corollary to this principle is that character strengths can be developed and improved. New research on personality traits shows that personality is more malleable than originally thought ( Blackie et al., 2014 ; Hudson and Fraley, 2015 ; Roberts et al., 2017 ), and that the change is not necessarily slow and gradual, which was another previously held assumption. Personality traits can shift for a number of reasons, including normative changes based on our genetics and predictable changes in social role (e.g., getting married, having a child), as well as nonnormative changes. Nonnormative changes include less common but deliberately chosen changes in one’s social role (e.g., joining the military) and atypical life events (e.g., going through a trauma; Borghans et al., 2008 ). In a study of the latter, the character strengths of gratitude, hope, kindness, leadership, love, spirituality, and teamwork all increased in a United States sample (but not a European sample) 2 months after the September 11, 2001 attack on the World Trade Center in New York City ( Peterson and Seligman, 2003 ). Ten months later these character strengths were still elevated but to a lesser degree.

Deliberate interventions focused on improving a part of our personality such as our character strengths also affect personality change. Intervention studies show that such intentional changes can have a positive impact ( Yeager et al., 2014 ; Hudson and Fraley, 2015 ; Roberts et al., 2017 ). Practitioners can help clients tap into their character strengths capacities.

Character and Character Strengths Are Dimensional

Character strengths are expressed in degrees – we have degrees of creativity, honesty, zest, and so on. As opposed to a categorical or diagnostic approach where one has a disorder, condition, or not, these strengths are measured and expressed as “continuous traits,” in that any character strength can show up across a wide continuum of more and less ( Miller, 2013 ). For practitioners, it’s important to reflect on dimensionality so that clients are not lost in all-or-none labels and placed in the creativity box or the teamwork box or as being empty in the self-regulation or humility boxes.

A corollary is that character strengths can be overused and underused along a dimension of character strengths expression. Any of the 24 character strengths can, in a given situation, be brought forth “too much” (overuse) or “too little” (underuse) which are viewed as strengths expressions or lack thereof that has a negative impact on oneself or others ( Niemiec, 2019a ). Too much curiosity is nosiness and too little can be apathetic, while an overplay of prudence is stuffiness and an underuse of it can be reckless.

Character Is Plural

As Chris Peterson (2006) often explained, the character is plural. This means people are not simply kind or humble, brave or hopeful, or honest. Rather, people display a variation, multiplicity, and uniqueness in their character strengths profile that informs the rich tapestry of an individual’s character.

A practical corollary is that character strengths are not expressed in isolation but in combinations or constellations ( Peterson, 2006 ; Biswas-Diener et al., 2011 ; Niemiec, 2018 ). It’s likely that as situations become increasingly complex or challenging, the array of character strengths being expressed increases. For example, a person making a career transition may find themselves leaning strongly on a panoply of character strengths, whereas a person who is doing their standard job on autopilot is likely to be expressing fewer character strengths and with less intensity.

This can also be framed using the relational concept that character strengths are interdependent – they “inter-are” ( Niemiec, 2012 ), to echo the Buddhist concept of interbeing ( Nhat Hanh, 1993 ). The character strengths all relate to one another ( McGrath, 2013 ) to some degree and these interactions might enable or hinder the expression of one another ( Peterson and Seligman, 2004 ).

All 24 Matter

An important pursuit in the creation of the VIA Classification was that whichever character strengths and virtues were included that they be ubiquitous across people, universal to the human experience ( Peterson and Seligman, 2004 ). Research was conducted on these strengths among people in remote cultures ( Biswas-Diener, 2006 ) and surveys across nations ( Park et al., 2006 ; McGrath, 2015 ) that support this principle. The character strengths, although varying in degrees, are part of being human.

A practical corollary to “all 24 matter” is that the importance of any given strength will vary by the situation or the intended consequence. For example, hope and zest are the character strengths found repeatedly to have the strongest links with happiness ( Park et al., 2004 ; Proctor et al., 2009 ), with some causal evidence ( Proyer et al., 2013b ). In terms of a different outcome or consequence, achievement, it’s likely that perseverance is going to matter in a significant way ( Lounsbury et al., 2009 ; Wagner et al., 2019 ). While all 24 matter, how they matter will vary by person and situation.

There Are Many Kinds of Strengths

The category of character strengths is not the only type of strength human beings express. Strengths categories can be and should be differentiated. This principle is important for the science of strengths to grow. A number of distinct types of strengths can be identified – talents (abilities or intelligences), skills (competencies), interests (passions), values, and resources.

Talents are hardwired abilities that encompass what we do naturally well; the multiple intelligences of Howard Gardner (1983) represents one set of examples. Skills develop through learning and practice, such as job skill-building with computer programming or presentation skill development or personal skill development around anger management or diversity skills training. The strength category of interests reflects our passions in life, those activities we are drawn to especially during leisure time; such as sport, art, and music. Resources are a strength category that is external to us; examples include having supportive friends, living in a safe neighborhood, and belonging to a spiritual community. Values are what we internally hold dear and reside in our thoughts and feelings; they say nothing about the action we actually take. A value for hard work does not equate to putting that value into action without turning to character strengths of perseverance and zest to transform value into behavior.

A corollary to this principle, we hypothesize, is that character strengths are the central mechanisms that allow these other strength categories to operate. For example, if someone has a talent for playing the guitar, they need to invest in ~10,000 h of deliberate practice over a 10 years period ( Ericsson and Ward, 2007 ) to really develop that talent/intelligence; this requires depths of perseverance, self-regulation, hope, prudence, creativity, and other character strengths to maximize that talent. In this way, character strengths are the driving force for other types of strengths ( Niemiec, 2018 ).

Character Is Being and Doing

The work of character strengths involves being and doing. For “being,” character strengths reflect our identity, self-understanding, and supporting people to be themselves. For “doing,” character strengths are expressed in behaviors/actions. There is support for both approaches in the literature: Research on signature strengths reflects identity – “being” true to one’s best qualities (e.g., Seligman et al., 2005 ). As researcher Rhett Diessner observed: “Traits are ontologically closer to the core of human being than is thinking or reasoning” ( Diessner et al., 2009 , p. 255). At the same time, there is an abundance of research linking character strengths and different types of action and outcomes – which can be viewed as our “doing” – putting one’s best qualities into action (e.g., Gander et al., 2013 ). A practical corollary is a connection with the overarching self-development goals of authenticity and goodness ( Niemiec, 2014 ). Individuals aspiring to be more authentic in life may focus on the “character is being” element (i.e., being authentic), while those striving to do more good in the world may resonate with the “character is doing” element (i.e., doing good).

The Practice of Character Strengths: Soaring, Emerging, or Ripe with Potential?

To build off the preceding principles and elements and definition of a strengths-based approach, and to further our hypotheses and experiences with character strengths-based practice, we administered a second section, 22 question survey using the Survey Monkey platform. The first section asked participants to rate themselves on each of the criteria of the “Checklist for Strengths-Based Practitioners” in Niemiec (2018 ; results are discussed in Table 1 ). The second section of the survey asked a number of questions about character strengths use in practice (results are discussed in Table 2 ). To recruit participants, we targeted audiences likely to be practitioners familiar with character strengths, including a robust Facebook group dedicated to character strengths knowledge and use, a personal invitation during a large, weekly, international, online community event dedicated to the topic of character strengths, and through the second author’s LinkedIn profile. The survey was open for 2 weeks in May 2020. A total of 113 individuals responded to the first section of the survey and 106 individuals completed both sections. Of the 113 respondents, 62 self-identified as therapists, counselors, or coaches. The remainder represented teachers, managers, and other professionals with some aspect of a helping role.

www.frontiersin.org

Table 1 . Results from section 1 of the practitioner survey ( N = 113). Each item from the Character Strengths Practitioner checklist in Niemiec (2018) is shown, including those not asked (noted with N/A).

www.frontiersin.org

Table 2 . Frequency of responses to character strengths-based questions ( N = 106).

The instructions offered to participants were minimal, focusing on the purpose of the survey as an informal gathering of information; and that the intended use of the results was to explore, in aggregate, how character strengths practices are emerging. Participants were not required to provide a name or e-mail although most did. Due to the mostly “character strengths” context mentioned, it is likely that participants were responding to the strengths-oriented questions with a mindset focused on “character strengths,” however, we did not specifically ask participants which type of strengths (e.g., character strengths, talents, skills, interests, etc.) they used in practice nor did we define these terms, therefore we cannot be certain participants were responding to questions with the 24 character strengths of the VIA Classification in mind. Our intention with the survey was to gather general impressions of practitioners’ experiences with character strengths and to begin to understand potential trends in the utilization of character strengths-based practices with clients and in personal growth. Table 2 shows the questions we asked in part two (with forced-choice format as noted) and the results in percentages.

The survey results reveal the use of character strengths practices to be relatively high, with 60% describing their use as always or frequently. About one-third (34%) view character strengths as foundational to their strengths-based practice while 37% view character strengths as a supplemental approach or adjunctive technique to their work. A small percentage (14%) of practitioners takes a formal approach in mapping out their strengths interventions with clients. This might reflect how character strengths practices are new and/or amorphous for many practitioners who perhaps do not feel equipped to map out formal structured approaches.

A general impression from these results is that character strengths continue to gain traction yet there is substantial opportunity for expansion and deepening: becoming more knowledgeable about the range of practices, and more routine and nuanced with the work. That said, this survey should not be viewed as a reflection of any field or profession as a whole as it was intentionally targeted narrowly – toward those who identify as engaging in strengths-based practices (and most likely, character strengths-based practices in particular). We imagine a normative survey of a particular practitioner profession would yield lower percentages in terms of character strengths engagement and application.

The following three subsections discuss the practice (“the how”) of character strengths, using a framework of what’s soaring, what’s emerging, and what’s ripe with potential. The purpose of these descriptive labels is to illuminate a range of practices, highlight strong areas, and offer concrete practices for practitioners to consider and for researchers to examine. They are based on an amalgamation of our experiences in practice, educating, and consulting, and conversations with strengths-based practitioners across the globe over a 10-year period, research on strengths practices and character strengths interventions, and the aforementioned survey. Of these, the greatest weight is given to the science of character strengths, followed by our experiences and our discussions with leading practitioners.

Soaring refers to practices that are popular and appear to be well-established among practitioners who work with character strengths. These approaches are research-based and/or solidly grounded conceptually. A soaring practice does not mean it is a foregone conclusion that the activity or approach will be successful for clients, nor that there is a mountain of research. In all cases, the science of character strengths is in need of deeper examination of the many nuances, dynamics, and applications. In some cases, soaring practices are those in which the practice of character strengths precedes the development of an extensive science of character strengths.

Emerging refers to practices that are increasing in popularity among practitioners familiar with character strengths. In such cases, the science is unfolding and does not reach the soaring point because either the science is too sparse or it’s not a tip-of-the-tongue approach for practitioners.

Ripe with potential refers to practices that have substantial promise and could be explored and developed for client benefit. These need scientific investigation. All are practices that strike a chord with practitioners and are being deployed with clients on a case-by-case basis. In some cases, the science might be ahead of the practice in that there is a strong scientific backing for the underlying philosophy/approach outside of the strengths field, however, practitioners are not aware of it or routinely using it.

These three categories – soaring, emerging, and ripe with potential – are not a ranking of priorities in practice nor do they represent a hierarchy of approaches.

Soaring Practices

Prioritize strengths over deficits.

Due to an entrenched negativity bias coupled with consistent research that bad is stronger than good ( Baumeister et al., 2001 ), it is a paradigm shift for practitioners to teach their clients to look for strengths and to reframe struggles. The degree to which practitioners educate on this – and consistently prioritize strengths – varies significantly but it is becoming more common. Numerous studies have found a strengths-focused approach to be superior to a deficit-focused approach. For example, focusing on strengths prior to student exams boosted optimism and buffered negative emotions, distress, and the decline of well-being compared to focusing on weaknesses ( Dolev-Amit et al., 2020 ). Other studies comparing strengths with weaknesses have revealed benefits for the former group for clinical depression outcomes ( Cheavens et al., 2012 ), for personal growth outcomes ( Meyers et al., 2015 ), and for perceived competence and intrinsic motivation ( Hiemstra and Van Yperen, 2015 ). While this does not imply a unilateral superiority of a strengths-focus, nor is it a rationale to ignore deficits, it clearly encourages and challenges practitioners to question their existing deficit-laden approach.

In our practitioner survey, the majority (84%) of respondents said that they assess and explore what is best in the person at least half the time; only 8% said they rarely or never do this. This leads us to the next soaring practice.

Use the VIA Survey

The VIA Survey (also referred to as the VIA Inventory of Strengths) is a psychometrically valid tool used to assess the 24 character strengths. It has undergone extensive revisions over the years based on published analyses ( McGrath and Wallace, 2019 ), as well as a technical manual for development and psychometrics on its various versions ( McGrath, 2017 ). Researchers utilize short forms, virtue measures, reverse-scored items, and direct measures of signature strengths ( McGrath and Wallace, 2019 ). Practitioners use the VIA Survey to start strengths conversations with clients, to build strengths awareness, to combat strengths blindness, to overcome client preoccupation with weaknesses/flaws, to enrich exploration of problems, and to catalyze interventions that foster client goals.

With over 15 million surveys administered and a steady increase each of the last 5 years, the popularity of the measure is clear. Its use in university positive psychology and well-being courses for students is commonplace and is strongly inclining in organizational/business and educational settings and counseling clinics. In our practitioner survey, practitioners administered the VIA Survey to each of their clients by the first meeting less than half the time (see Table 1 for the items and average scores for this practice and for several other practices we assessed using the “Checklist for Strengths-Based Practitioners” in Niemiec, 2018 ). The number of practitioners who administer the VIA Survey in later sessions is unknown.

Explore and Encourage Signature Strengths

Signature strengths are those character strengths highest in an individual’s VIA Survey results and are defined as involving the three E’s – character strengths that are essential or best reflect who the person is at their core; energizing in that expressing the strength is uplifting and elicits an increase in energy levels; and effortless in that the expression is easy and natural ( Niemiec and McGrath, 2019 ).

Despite only having a few sentences in the 800-page VIA Classification text that introduced this consensual nomenclature ( Peterson and Seligman, 2004 ), the concept, research, and practice of signature strengths has received substantial attention, especially in the science of positive psychology. A meta-analysis was published on the intervention, use a signature strength in a new way ( Schutte and Malouff, 2019 ), which involves subjects identifying one of their highest strengths from their VIA Survey results and then using that signature strength in a new way each day, typically for 1 week. The meta-analysis found that in randomized controlled studies, this intervention boosted happiness, flourishing and strengths use, and decreased depression. The practical way this intervention is framed in studies makes it easy for practitioners to apply it with clients.

In the practitioner survey, 58% said they self-reflect on signature strengths, that they use their own signature strengths during sessions/meetings about 63% of the time, and they prime themselves to their client’s signature strengths before meetings ( Fluckiger et al., 2009 ) ~45% of the time.

Engage in Strengths-Spotting

Operationalized as the SEA model ( Niemiec, 2018 ), the steps of character strengths-spotting involve the practitioner spotting/labeling the strengths they see in action, explaining with rational/behavioral evidence how they saw the strengths expressed, and offering appreciation – pointing out the perceived value of the strength from a perspective of emotionality, meaning, linkage with goals/outcomes.

The spotting of character strengths in oneself or others is easy to hold as an assumption that it’s useful and practical and neglect its scientific investigation. In addition, many character strengths intervention studies embed strengths-spotting in the intervention in that the subjects identify their top strengths from a list, use their top five strengths on the VIA Survey, or consider a strength they value and want to expand upon and thereby the aspect of character strengths-spotting is not examined separately. That said, a couple of recent studies have looked at strengths-spotting itself and found benefits relating to positive affect, classroom engagement, and need satisfaction ( Quinlan et al., 2019 ); and in an analysis of behaviors associated with strengths-spotted (written about), a variety of valued outcomes were found including empathy, spontaneous affection, helpfulness, friendship, letting go, and speaking positively ( Haslip et al., 2019 ).

While practitioners might not use character strengths-spotting in every meeting, we view this as a soaring approach that has taken hold. In many cases, it is the first step practitioners use when sharing about character strengths with clients or encouraging them to take action. More than half (52%) of the practitioners surveyed use at least one type of strengths-spotting intervention with clients.

Draw the Well-Being/Happiness Link With Character Strengths

One of the character strengths outcomes most investigated has been well-being, in which various measures of flourishing and related concepts such as thriving, life satisfaction, emotional happiness, and elements of flourishing (e.g., positive relationships, accomplishment, meaning) have been positively correlated with character strengths. From early studies ( Peterson et al., 2005 ), to recent studies ( Wagner et al., 2019 ), to cross-cultural work ( Shimai et al., 2006 ), to direct causal work ( Proyer et al., 2013a ) and multiple intervention studies (e.g., Gander et al., 2013 ), the alignment of well-being and/or happiness indicators and character strengths is one of the most consistent positive findings in the field of positive psychology.

While broad character strengths work can increase one’s well-being and decrease ill-being, many practitioners narrow in on what some researchers have dubbed “the happiness strengths” ( Littman-Ovadia et al., 2016 ). So-named because of their consistent link with happiness across several studies, cultures, and populations (e.g., Park et al., 2004 ), the five strengths are zest, hope, love, gratitude, and curiosity. Many practitioners appreciate the single-intervention simplicity and straightforward approach of targeting one of these character strengths in clients. Niemiec (2018) offers evidence-based interventions for each, referred to as activate your zest, best possible self, loving-kindness meditation with strengths, gratitude letter/visit, and boosting curiosity through novelty. Caveats accompany this approach such as that there are many ways to happiness through strengths (not just targeting one or more of these five); that if a client is not high in them it does not mean they cannot boost happiness; and that being high in them is not a happiness guarantee.

Emerging Practices

Draw the adversity/resilience link with character strengths.

While we’d like to say this is soaring in popularity, it is clear practitioners focusing on character strengths in the first couple decades of the VIA Classification have veered toward well-being, sometimes exclusively when discussing strengths. Theories have been developed that character strengths are at the core of both positivity/opportunity and adversity/suffering. Numerous character strengths functions on the adversity/suffering side include the buffering, reappraisal, and resilience functions ( Niemiec, 2020 ). There are studies looking at character strengths across various forms of adversity, such as stress ( Harzer and Ruch, 2015 ), war and terrorism ( Shoshani and Slone, 2016 ), natural disaster ( Duan and Guo, 2015 ), at-risk/vulnerable populations ( Duan and Wang, 2018 ), traumatic brain injury ( Andrewes et al., 2014 ), suicidal inpatients ( Huffman et al., 2014 ), psychopathology ( Freidlin et al., 2017 ), addictions ( Logan et al., 2010 ), aggression ( Park and Peterson, 2008 ), and intellectual/developmental disability ( Niemiec et al., 2017 ). Several of these studies support and discuss character strengths resilience; one study in particular found character strengths predict resilience over different positive phenomena such as self-efficacy, self-esteem, positive affect, social support, optimism, and life satisfaction ( Martínez-Martí and Ruch, 2016 ). Niemiec (2020) documents studies linking each of the 24 character strengths with resilience.

When Possible in Practice, Default on the Science

This approach involves having and integrating a solid grounding in character strengths science when introducing character strengths to a client. This foundation extends to practitioners favoring a mindset that they first turn to the scientific findings on character strengths when offering an intervention. In many instances, we have observed well-intentioned practitioners make something up and then link it back to “positive psychology research” explaining the activity as “based on evidence.” In this emerging scientific field, we suggest a more conservative approach: start with the science and then allow the practice to unfold from there. For example, start with intervention studies that have found using signature strengths to be superior to controls; use that as the practical strategy. If that is not an optimal avenue for your client, you might then turn to theoretical articles, correlation studies, or one activity within an evidence-based program. To flesh out this approach, Niemiec (2018) offered seven, non-sequential categories to guide practitioners in applying strengths, based on evidence; these were later discussed in Ruch et al. (2020) as pathways to justify a strengths-based intervention. A summary of these can be found in Table 3 .

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Table 3 . Research-based framework to guide practitioners in applying character strengths.

Overuse, Underuse, and Optimal Use of Character Strengths

An exciting area for practitioners is examining character strengths overuse and underuse. New empirical work using the Overuse, Underuse, and Optimal-Use of Character Strengths Survey ( Freidlin et al., 2017 ) has begun to discover overuse/underuse patterns related to diagnostic conditions, such as for social anxiety disorder ( Freidlin et al., 2017 ) and obsessive-compulsive disorder ( Littman-Ovadia and Freidlin, 2019 ). Central arguments, theory, concepts, research, practical strategies, and language for overuse and underuse have been articulated ( Niemiec, 2019a ).

Practitioners help clients identify the character strengths that are out of balance in challenging situations and relationship conflicts and discuss client strategies for finding balance – or to arrive at the golden mean for a particular situation – the right combination of strengths, expressed with the right intensity, and in the right situation. That said, there are currently no intervention studies that have tested the overuse of character strengths, which indicates that this intriguing dynamic has much to be explored.

The Integration of Mindfulness and Character Strengths

The integration of these popular areas is of significant interest to practitioners. The weaving of character strengths to improve meditation and mindful living practices is referred to as “strong mindfulness” ( Niemiec et al., 2012 ) while the using of mindfulness and mindful living to bring balance, savvy, and enhancement to character strengths is referred to as “mindful strengths use” ( Niemiec, 2012 ). The 8-week program that guides participants through the boosting and integration of each is called mindfulness-based strengths practice (MBSP; Niemiec, 2014 ). Several theoretical, applied, and intervention studies offer a good evidence-base for MBSP. Intervention studies have shown benefits for well-being, engagement, meaning, health, and student retention ( Wingert et al., 2020 ). Additional studies have found MBSP to be superior to the most widespread mindfulness program [mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR)] for boosting work task performance, workplace satisfaction, and the strength of humor ( Hofmann et al., 2019 ; Pang and Ruch, 2019a ).

In the practitioner survey, the integration of mindfulness and character strengths was more common in personal practice than in application with clients.

Use the Character Strengths Model: Aware, Explore, Apply

The most straightforward character strengths process is the three-phase model, Aware-Explore-Apply ( Niemiec, 2014 ) which entails: first, raising awareness of a character strength the client was previously unaware of or had limited use of; next, co-exploring the character strength with questions, activities, reflections, and challenges; and finally, moving into the application as the client chooses concrete goals and next steps for putting the character strength into action. These phases have been studied and revealed positive results, including a boost to thrive and decrease in negative emotions ( Bu and Duan, 2018 ) and increases in strengths use and well-being ( Dubreuil et al., 2016 ). This model can be applied in any field in which working on character strengths is part of the focus.

Keep a Personal Character Strengths Practice

As with teaching other practices, it’s important the practitioner first applies the practice to themselves (e.g., for mindfulness, see Dunn et al., 2012 ). This facilitates the “know thyself” and “practice what you preach” adages common in areas of self-development, and it enhances the understanding, depth, and facility when later working with a client’s character strengths. There are many ways to set up a practice with character strengths (which can, in turn, be taught to clients). Four main practice pathways from Niemiec (2018) include:

• Formal : having a regular practice with strengths, often the same time each day or week, e.g., practicing gratitude every evening by counting three good things that happened at the end of each day; or having a strengths appreciation conversation with one’s relationship partner every Sunday morning.

• Informal : using character strengths when needed such as at times of stress, e.g., when one’s body feels tight from stress, one pauses to breathe and consider which of their character strengths they could immediately bring forward.

• In-the-moment : looking to daily routines and areas of life taken for granted for character strengths to be discovered, e.g., while reflecting/journaling, a person realizes they have already been using their appreciation of beauty, prudence, and curiosity as they take their dog for a walk.

• Cued : use of the external environment to cue or remind the individual to use their character strengths, e.g., the individual arranges that every time they hear a bell in their environment, they will pause and consider how they can use one of their signature strengths.

Target Specific Strengths

A number of strength practitioners focus on one particular character strength in their practice with clients (37%). There is an extensive literature on each of the 24 strengths ( Peterson and Seligman, 2004 ) so focusing on a specific character strength can have a scientific foundation. The practitioner should be familiar with intervention studies supporting the targeted strength, such as for the strength of hope, being familiar with interventions such as teaching clients about agency and pathways thinking ( Snyder, 2000 ). This is an emerging approach that offers practitioners a simple inroad into helping clients, although it’s important to point out it can be narrow and limiting if one or two-character strengths are the sole focus or the only tools in the practitioner’s armamentarium.

Ripe with Potential Practices

These are areas that are strong conceptually yet empirical research is scant. In workshops and trainings for practitioners, these are usually received with significant enthusiasm and curiosity. Several of these areas reflect character strengths dynamics. This is not an exhaustive list and is meant to offer initial ideas for researchers to investigate and for practitioners to work with and offer observations to researchers. Further exploration and examples for each can be found in Niemiec (2018) .

Phasic Strengths

These are strengths of an individual that are not signature strengths, yet the individual brings forth the strength strongly when the situation calls for it ( Peterson and Seligman, 2004 ). A person who’s not high in zest might bring forth significant energy and enthusiasm when presenting to students. Despite being discussed in the original text of the VIA Classification, including a tentative measurement tool called the Rise to the Occasion Inventory ( Peterson and Seligman, 2004 ), we are not aware of any empirical studies assessing or examining phasic strengths. Some observations have been made about these strengths as situational strengths ( Escandón et al., 2016 ), and some conceptualizing has been done on phasic strengths and stress ( Niemiec, 2019b ). This is where the practice runs ahead of the research as practitioners ask clients about phasic strengths and explore situations in which clients rise to the occasion with character strengths at uncertain and challenging times.

Hot-Buttons

Hot buttons are sensitive areas in which another person’s perceived strengths overuse or underuse triggers discomfort/frustration in the observer. This might stem from the observer’s own character strength beliefs, preferences, or expectations. Hypothetically, the observer’s character strength has been affronted or offended in a way that feels personal and deliberate. This area is ripe for research investigation and for practitioners to explore relational conflicts and troubling interactions clients have.

Receiving Character Strengths

Most of the research and practice on character strengths has focused on inwardly and outwardly expressing one’s character strengths. What about how the character strength is received by the other? First introduced as a character strength name, the “capacity to love and be loved,” Peterson and Seligman (2004) may not have realized they were touching upon an interesting strength dynamic. Pileggi Pawelski and Pawelski (2018) advanced this dynamic by highlighting how gratitude is given and received in couples. We argue that all 24 character strengths have this characteristic, however, research on the topic is sparse. Observationally, how a relationship partner receives humor from their partner’s frequent use of humor might dictate whether the relationship will deepen or be constrained. The expression of forgiveness by someone can be herculean in terms of the emotional toll and therefore how the forgiveness is received by the other can be an important factor in the giver’s healing.

Character Strengths Collisions

A character strengths collision can occur intrapersonally or interpersonally and refers to the dynamic when two character strengths are opposed to one another and are eliciting an internal or external tension/conflict.

Character Strengths Synergies

These are win-win situations in which the character strengths of two or more people combine and are greater than the sum of the parts. Synergies can also occur internally with character strengths expressed together to a positive effect.

The Tempering Effect and Towing Effect

Described in the context of overuse and underuse of character strengths in Niemiec (2019a) , these dynamics occur when one character strength is used to bring balance to another character strength. The tempering effect refers to the use of character strength to help manage a higher strength, for example, using self-regulation to temper one’s curious questioning. The towing effect refers to the use of a higher character strength (e.g., signature strength) to boost or tow-along a lower character strength, for example, the use of one’s top strength of the love of learning to read about and explore new knowledge about how to use one’s lower strength of humility.

The Research on Character Strengths: Soaring, Emerging, or Ripe with Potential?

We use the same framework – soaring, emerging, ripe with potential – for the current status of the research on character strengths. The first author has been tracking the science of character for more than a decade and an exhaustive summarized list of over 700 studies can be found categorized on the VIA Institute website ( VIA Institute, 2021 ). Note that this number does not include the thousands of studies that have amassed on particular character strengths (e.g., creativity, hope, leadership, love), rather it represents studies using a VIA Survey assessment measure (there are 17 validated measures available to any researcher), the VIA Classification, or clusters of specific character strengths (e.g., studies of the character strengths under the transcendence virtue, Huta and Hawley, 2010 ).

As opposed to an exhaustive list of research areas or domains that are soaring, emerging, or ripe with potential, we selected a handful of examples of domain areas for each of the three categories. These examples are offered to catalyze researchers to build off of what is soaring or emerging or to consider pursuing areas that would benefit from growth.

Soaring Research Domains

To be an area of research that is soaring, we considered domain areas that have at least 25 studies that explored the science of character in that domain. The domains of work/organizations and education meet this criterion (see VIA Institute, 2021 ). While still neophyte character strength domains, these areas have examined situations within their respective domain, replicated findings, offered basic and applied research, and deployed a number of character strengths concepts for further research and practice. While we frame these as “soaring,” we want to highlight the observation that there is far more that we do not know about the application of character strengths in work and education than we do know. That said, a strong foundation is being built for not only researchers but also practitioners to explore and advance.

The workplace has been the most thriving domain in the study of character strengths as character strengths relate to a number of positive and ambitious workplace behaviors ( Gander et al., 2012 ). A range of strengths-related outcomes include job performance ( Harzer and Ruch, 2014 ), job satisfaction, work engagement, and work well-being ( Miglianico et al., 2019 ), improved workplace climate ( van Woerkom and Meyers, 2014 ), employee levels of self-efficacy and proactive behavior ( van Woerkom et al., 2016 ), and improved coping with stress at work ( Harzer and Ruch, 2015 ), to name a few. The importance to both managers and employees of character strengths awareness, alignment with work tasks, and appreciation among colleagues is substantial ( Mayerson, 2015 ).

Novel findings with employees’ top strengths have been conducted and found that signature strengths are connected with positive work experiences, irrespective of which character strengths of the 24 are highest ( Harzer and Ruch, 2013 ). Another study found that workers who used four or more of their signature strengths at work had more positive work experiences and work-as-a-calling than those who used less than four signature strengths ( Harzer and Ruch, 2012 ). A study with work supervisors support found that employees who received supervisor support around character strengths (but not colleague support) increased their character strengths use the following day ( Lavy et al., 2016 ). Different subset categories of character strengths (e.g., lower strengths, happiness strengths) have been examined in the workplace with interesting results. For example, Littman-Ovadia et al. (2016) found that the subsets of signature, lower, and happiness strengths were each associated with positive outcomes, but for work performance, organizational citizenship behavior, and (less) counterproductive work behavior, signature strengths contributed most while for work meaning, engagement, and satisfaction, the happiness strengths contributed most.

The second soaring domain in the science of character strengths is education. Positive education examines character strengths patterns and interventions in children and adolescents within and outside of the school context. Character strengths have been articulated as central to the educational experience of young people and a number of practices for the classroom setting have been discussed ( Linkins et al., 2015 ; Darwish and Niemiec, 2021 ). Character strengths have been outlined as central for boosting 21st-century competencies relating to cognitive, interpersonal, and intrapersonal competencies as identified by the American National Research Council ( Lavy, 2019 ). In addition, systems thinking and systems-wide implementation of character strengths are crucial for this domain ( Darwish and Niemiec, 2021 ).

A wide range of positive classroom outcomes have been found such as positive affect, negative affect, and school achievement ( Weber et al., 2016 ), well-being ( Oppenheimer et al., 2014 ), strengths use, class cohesion, relatedness, and less class friction ( Quinlan et al., 2014 ), as well as social relationships, school performance, and academic motivation ( Grinhauz and Castro Solano, 2014 ).

Intervention studies of programs from different parts of the world have shown positive findings. In the United Kingdom, a study evaluated the impact of a character strengths program on adolescents and found that adolescents who participated in the character strengths exercises had significantly higher life satisfaction than adolescents who did not participate ( Proctor et al., 2011 ). In a Chinese educational context, a strengths training intervention was found to be effective in boosting life satisfaction in the short‐ and long-run ( Duan et al., 2013 ). Some positive education programs which have character strengths as core to the program have found increases in academic scores, social skills, and students’ enjoyment and engagement in school, as well as improve character strengths such as curiosity, love of learning, and creativity ( Seligman et al., 2009 ). In New Zealand, a strengths-spotting intervention of teachers found benefits for improving student outcomes which were explained by better classroom engagement, positive affect, and needs satisfaction ( Quinlan et al., 2019 ). In India, randomized controlled trials involving thousands of girls in poverty found that those who received a curriculum which incorporated character strengths (i.e., identification and use of signature strengths and concrete examples of using other strengths) exhibited significantly greater physical health and psychosocial health benefits in comparison to those girls who received a similar curriculum which did not include character strengths and girls who did not receive any curriculum at all (controls; Leventhal et al., 2016 ). In Australia, while not an intervention study, the integration of character strengths knowledge and activities into an entire school revealed a number of benefits for teachers and students and is documented in White and Waters (2014) .

Emerging Research Domains

For the category of emerging domains, we identified domains with at least 10 peer-reviewed/scholarly articles on character strengths in the domain and were published recently (within the last 5 years) indicating a spike of interest. This points to a new literature beginning to emerge, perhaps reflecting enthusiasm from research groups and scholars claiming an interest in the area. We discuss two domains: health/medicine and mindfulness.

Character strengths have been examined across various dimensions of physical health, including healthy eating, physical fitness, personal hygiene, substance avoidance, and living an active way of life, finding some character strengths more relevant in each area ( Proyer et al., 2013a ). A randomized controlled trial with seriously ill children found that a “granting a wish” intervention reduced nausea and increased life satisfaction, positive emotions, and strengths, compared to a control group ( Chaves et al., 2016 ). Niemiec and Yarova (2019) reviewed the implication of character strengths integration for health across three levels – the individual, the healthcare provider, and the system.

Intervention studies have brought character strengths in as one piece of a healthcare program and received positive feedback from patients as some of the most impactful elements. For example, patients suffering from acute coronary syndrome benefitted from an 8-week phone intervention which included identification and use of a signature strength ( Huffman et al., 2016 ). A number of significant findings surround the integration of character strengths with physicians ( Strecker et al., 2019 ), including the connections with physician work engagement and well-being ( Huber et al., 2019 ), and the mutual impact of signature strengths applications and perceived hospital climate ( Höge et al., 2019 ).

The integration of mindfulness and character strengths was mentioned earlier as an emerging practice. The research has received similar support with ~20 publications since the development of the first positive psychology program to integrate mindfulness with positive qualities in a systematic way – MBSP ( Niemiec, 2014 ). MBSP has received theoretical support for its two-way, mutual integration ( Pang and Ruch, 2019b ) and there are several intervention studies with positive findings (e.g., Wingert et al., 2020 ). A wide range of application areas have been explored with MBSP (e.g., Bretherton and Niemiec, 2020 ), for example, supervision ( Sharp and Rhinehart, 2018 ), early childhood development ( Lottman et al., 2017 ), meaning in life ( Littman-Ovadia and Niemiec, 2017 ), and intellectual/developmental disability ( Shogren et al., 2017 ).

Additional areas that meet or nearly meet the criteria for emerging research domains with character strengths include military, positive psychotherapy, positive parenting, intellectual/developmental disability, workplace/team roles, overuse/underuse/optimal-use, stress management, and positive relationships.

Ripe With Potential Research

For the ripe with potential domain, we selected areas in the science of character strengths that have between zero and three studies and the potential contribution of character strengths is robust and synergistic. We highlight three areas that are ripe for character strengths integration: spirituality, environment/nature connection, and peace/conflict studies. Each has seedlings emerging yet is wide open for extensive scientific investigation and eventually best practices.

The integration of spirituality and character strengths has been piecemeal with spirituality links to particular character strengths such as forgiveness, gratitude, humility, and love. The mutual synergy informed by the latest character strengths concepts, hundreds of studies in character science, character strengths interventions, and new research in spirituality has been largely unexplored. Niemiec et al. (2020) approached these areas by laying out a map of the six existing levels of integration for spirituality within the VIA Classification, and offered models for exploring this integration in the context of the psycho-spiritual journey toward wholeness. They offer two theoretical pathways by which character strengths and spirituality integrate and mutually benefit one another – the grounding path (where strengths offer tangibility and thereby deepen spirituality) and the sanctification path (where spirituality can elevate character strengths) and expound on several integration practices for each pathway that are grounded in science. Another article ( Littman-Ovadia and David, 2020 , this issue) shares how character strengths contribute to non-dual spirituality. Future studies might examine these pathways of integration and the practices therein.

The area of environment/nature connection also represents significant potential for the importance of character strengths. Considering the wide-ranging benefits of character strengths applications, it would seem reasonable to believe there would be a contribution to both pro-environmental behaviors and nature connectedness. One study showed character strengths were connected with sustainable behaviors, defined as actions intended to protect the socio-physical resources of the planet ( Corral-Verdugo et al., 2015 ). Another study examined psychological barriers to environmental self-efficacy and found certain character strengths were strongly related (e.g., zest and leadership) and others were related but less strongly (e.g., kindness, humility, prudence, fairness, and forgiveness; Moeller and Stahlmann, 2019 ). Work on the integration of MBSP and nature connectedness/pro-environmental behaviors is in the beginning stages.

Peace studies (or peace/conflict studies) is the area that surprises us most that there has not been extensive research integrating character strengths to date. Cohrs et al. (2013) offered ways in which positive psychology contributes to peace and point out that character strengths offer strategies for inner peace and peace of mind and might contribute to peace, nonviolence, reduced reactivity, and building a global resilience.

In the literature on peace, a common distinction is made between positive peace and negative peace, where positive peace refers to the creation or building up of harmony and equity while negative peace refers to the decrease or elimination of violence, war, and human conflict ( Christie et al., 2008 ; Neto and Marujo, 2017 ). In addition, there are many types of peace including inner/personal peace, relational peace, intragroup peace, intergroup peace, and international peace. Character strengths would seemingly have a significant place in positive and negative peace across each of these levels. The first author has begun an investigation of the role of character strengths with these levels.

Additional areas we believe are ripe with potential include social/racial justice, positive leadership, addictions and psychopathology, and sport/performance psychology.

The science of well-being, or science of positive psychology, was conceived as a bridge between academic scholarship, practical wisdom, and applied psychology/self-development. It is enveloped with many scholars, researchers, and practitioners eager to advance the field. One of the challenges is the siloed nature of the work. One of our aims with this paper has been to catalyze dialogue for scientists and practitioners by offering definitions, principles, and trending areas to unify disparate scientists and practitioners and spur collaborations.

We suggest the need for more seminal thought leadership papers and basic research in the areas mentioned as ripe with potential, and for researchers to take the next steps in examining the areas in the soaring and emerging domains. From a big-picture vantage point, the work in all these areas is only beginning; there are many nuances and challenges to untangle and discover in advancing the science of character strengths ( Ruch et al., 2020 ).

We encourage practitioners to deepen their study of the principles of character strengths outlined and consistently engage in research-based practices with character strengths, which includes using the science as the default, having your own personal practice with character strengths, and taking action with practices such as strengths-spotting, signature strengths exploration, integration with mindfulness, and adhering to character strengths models such as aware-explore-apply.

We have found – and as noted here the science supports this – character strengths play a substantial role for both the boosting of well-being and the handling of adversity. Each is mountainous areas for researchers and trained practitioners to continue exploring in the pursuit of understanding and benefiting the human condition.

Data Availability Statement

The raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be made available by the authors, without undue reservation.

Ethics Statement

Ethical review and approval was not required for the study on human participants in accordance with the local legislation and institutional requirements. Written informed consent for participation was not required for this study in accordance with the national legislation and the institutional requirements.

Author Contributions

RN researched, drafted, and revised the paper. RP lead the practitioner survey discussed and revised the paper. All authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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Keywords: character strengths, VIA classification, VIA Survey, strengths interventions, strengths-based practitioner, strengths-spotting, signature strengths, mindfulness

Citation: Niemiec RM and Pearce R (2021) The Practice of Character Strengths: Unifying Definitions, Principles, and Exploration of What’s Soaring, Emerging, and Ripe With Potential in Science and in Practice. Front. Psychol . 11:590220. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.590220

Received: 31 July 2020; Accepted: 11 December 2020; Published: 27 January 2021.

Reviewed by:

Copyright © 2021 Niemiec and Pearce. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY) . The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Ryan M. Niemiec, [email protected]

Disclaimer: All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

10 Best Character Developments in Bleach: Thousand Year Blood War

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The Bleach anime series regularly expanded its huge cast of characters with new heroes and villains alike, and plenty of them enjoyed some rich, meaningful character arcs. Even gaining new powers and weapons counted as character development, since Bleach 's best heroes often powered up by learning more about themselves and their origins. In other cases, characters became much deeper thanks to flashback sequences to explore their origins, or perhaps those characters evolved their relationships to other people.

Just when it seemed the best Bleach characters had completed their arcs and became their best selves in the anime, the Thousand-Year Blood War story arc began. That arc proved that many of Bleach 's best and strongest heroes still had more emotional depth and nuance left to explore, leading to some impressive and heartfelt arcs of personal discovery, letting go of grief, and much more. And of course, many of these excellent developments took place in the heat of battle, a narrative staple of Bleach 's anime.

10 Ichigo Kurosaki Learned the Full Truth of His Family Tree

Debut episode: "the day i became a shinigami".

Protagonist Ichigo Kurosaki has enjoyed many character developments ever since Bleach 's first episode, and he's still at it in the new anime. He is one of several Bleach characters who seemed to reach their peak, only to realize that they still have a long way to go. Ichigo needed to reforge his zanpakuto and discover the truth of his origins.

After his zanpakuto broke apart, Ichigo returned home and was told the full truth of his family tree , including his Quincy heritage from his mother's side and the origins of his inner Hollow. That allowed Ichigo to embrace his inner Hollow as his true zanpakuto while also letting go of his grief about Masaki, which brought him some much-needed clarity and peace.

9 Isshin Kurosaki Was Revealed to Be Squad 10's Selfless Leader

Bleach three-way split feature image with Rukia, Isshin and Renji

10 Weakest Bankai In All of Bleach

The raw power of the Gotei 13's bankai releases make so many lesser bankai seem completely useless by comparison.

The three main members of the Kurosaki family all got rich personal development in the TYBW story arc, and around the same time, too. Isshin Kurosaki's main development in the original anime was the truth of his Soul Reaper origins, but there was still more to say about Ichigo's goofy father. In the TYBW arc, fans saw more of his Soul Reaper days, with him being Captain Isshin Shiba of squad 10.

Isshin didn't take his duties entirely seriously back then, but all that changed when he confronted a powerful Hollow called White . He fought it alongside Masaki Kurosaki, then gladly gave up his powers to protect Masaki from White poisoning her from the inside. It was noble and kind of Isshin to make that sacrifice for a Quincy girl he barely knew, and then he humbly embraced his new role as a doctor and family man in the world of the living.

8 Lieutenant Chojiro Sasakibe Was Almost Like a Son to Yamamoto in the Old Days

Debut episode: "renji's confrontation".

A young Chojiro Sasakibe kneels in front of Captain-Commander Yamamoto in Bleach Thousand-Year Blood War

Lieutenant Chojiro Sasakibe received no meaningful development when he appeared in the fondly-remembered Soul Society arc . In fact, the anime didn't even show what his shikai can really do, and he had no serious dialogue, either. Chojiro seemed doomed to remain an obscure side character, but then the TYBW arc expanded on his arc at the last minute.

Around the time Chojiro got himself killed at the hands of the Wandenreich, Bleach fans saw a touching flashback sequence where a younger Chojiro and Yamamoto had a father/son dynamic as student and master. Chojiro annoyed Yamamoto but also made him immensely proud, and it was no wonder Yamamoto was so overwhelmed by grief when Chojiro died. Fans also got to briefly see his bankai, a lightning-based weapon that Driscoll Berci stole.

7 Uryu Ishida Was Forced to Make a Difficult Decision About the Quincy Tribe

Debut episode: "greetings from a stuffed lion".

Uryu Ishida was introduced as Ichigo's rival and friend in the first season of Bleach , and he had plenty more development after that, too. Fans saw him overcome his anger to make peace with the Soul Reapers, including his grandfather's killer, and fans even saw his soft side as he nursed a secret infatuation with Orihime Inoue.

Overall, Uryu became a well-rounded and lovable character who thought he had found peace and balance, but then the Quincy tribe returned out of thin air. That forced Uryu to choose between his family and his beloved tribe, a tense and meaningful dilemma that Uryu took seriously before he made his consequential decision. Now he stands by Yhwach's side, but his friendship with Ichigo may not be entirely forgotten.

6 Captain Sajin Komamura Showed How Far He Would Go to Claim Victory

Debut episode: "assemble the gotei 13".

Sajin Komamura in his human form in Bleach: The Thousand-Year Blood War.

10 Loose Ends Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War Part 3 Still Needs To Wrap Up

There are still many loose ends in Bleach Thousand Year Blood War arc and the shonen's third cour has to start wrapping them up.

Captain Sajin Komamura's main development in the original Bleach anime involved his strained friendship with Captain Kaname Tosen, who betrayed the Soul Society and even fought Sajin in the fake Karakura Town. Sajin and Tosen had a tearful good-bye, and some time later, Sajin faced another personal crisis. He lost his bankai to Bambietta Basterbine, forcing him to make a costly decision.

Sajin confronted his canine clan's elder, ready to give up his very heart to gain the power necessary to defeat Bambietta. That put Sajin in a brand-new context, finally revealing another member of his elusive canine clan while proving his absolute resolve in the new war. Sajin regained his bankai and even assumed a human form to defeat Bambietta, though it cost him so much, he had to step down as Captain later.

5 Captain Kenpachi Zaraki Showed His Vulnerable Side and Accepted His Zanpakuto as a Partner

Debut episode: "gin ichimaru's shadow".

Kenpachi Zaraki holds up his zanpakuto in Bleach.

Captain Kenpachi is another Bleach character who seemingly reached the apex of his power and self-confidence in the original series, but the Thousand-Year Blood War story arc proved otherwise. Kenpachi still had more power to claim and hadn't yet broken his mental barriers, so he needed Captain Unohana's help to overcome both problems.

Kenpachi dueled Unohana to the death, allowing him to learn his zanpakuto's true name while also teaching him to wield his full power and stop treating battle like a game. Thus, Kenpachi shattered his mental barriers to become the ultimate warrior, and he even showed his vulnerable side along the way as he mourned Unohana's death. In Unohana's eyes, Kenpachi was acting just like the kid he once was when the two of them met years ago.

4 Masaki Kurosaki's Origins as a Quincy Were Laid Bare

Masaki Kurosaki has a quincy bow and arrow in Bleach anime.

Ichigo's mother Masaki was fridged early in the anime when she died at Grand Fisher's hands one rainy afternoon. The original Bleach anime gave no hint that there was anything special about Masaki, but then the TYBW arc revealed the shocking truth: that she had been a human Quincy, just like the members of the Ishida family.

Fans got to see Masaki's family history as she integrated into the Ishida family that adopted her, and then fans saw her meet and fall in love with Isshin Shiba the Soul Reaper. From there, Masaki set aside the Quincy way of life to build a household with Isshin, but she retained her powers until the moment before Grand Fisher struck.

3 Captain Retsu Unohana Went From Monster to Mother Figure and Back to Monster

4th Squad Captain Retsu Unohana from Bleach gives a side eye.

10 Most Brutal Injuries in Bleach's Soul Society Arc, Ranked

Bleach's heroes and villains have survived ghastly wounds and injuries, only to return to the fray later on, tougher than ever.

Captain Retsu Unohana hid some dire secrets that the original anime only vaguely hinted at. She could intimidate any squad 11 member with a stern look, but that wasn't just a gag. Unohana was probably tapping into her true nature as the brutal Yachiru Unohana, the first Kenpachi and squad 11's founding Captain.

The motherly Captain Unohana seemed like the last person in the Gotei 13 to have a history as a bloodthirsty killer, but that was the truth, and it recontextualized the character in a big way. She also proved her incredible resolve by training her former student Kenpachi Zaraki one more time, fighting him to the death to help him awaken his shikai. Fans might call it tough love, a different kind of motherly love than Unohana showed in the anime's original run.

2 Captain Byakuya Kuchiki Embraced Humility and Supported Rukia as Her Brother

Debut episode: "kon's great plan".

Captain Byakuya Kuchiki evolved and grew a great deal in the original Bleach anime. He was cold and even villainous around Ichigo and Rukia, but that's not because he was a bad person. For personal reasons, Byakuya was determined to uphold the law and set a good example, only to realize that the power of family was more important. Byakuya then became the protective foster brother Rukia needed him to be.

That personal arc continued in the TYBW anime, culminating in Byakuya coaching Rukia as she used her bankai for the first time in battle. Byakuya even told Rukia how proud he was of her, which brought Rukia to happy tears. Also, Byakuya finally learned a hard lesson about humility and complacency after losing to Äs Nödt, allowing him to reassess himself and continue growing despite his prestige.

1 Rukia Kuchiki Glowed Up One More Time With Her New Bankai

Rukia activates her icy Bankai in Bleach Thousand-Year Blood War

Rukia Kuchiki grew a great deal over the course of Bleach 's overall story, from forming new friendships in the world of the living to letting go of her grief and guilt over Kaien Shiba's death. Rukia also glowed up when she regained her Soul Reaper powers and showed off her shikai, Sode no Shirayuki, but she wasn't done yet.

Incredibly, Rukia had the potential for bankai as well, and realized that potential when facing Äs Nödt in battle to avenge her brother's earlier defeat. Not only did Rukia get stronger, she also felt empowered and found true happiness as Byakuya warmly acknowledged her as someone wonderful.

Bleach Thousand Year Blood War anime season 2 art

Bleach: Thousand Year Blood War

The peace is suddenly broken when warning sirens blare through the Soul Society. Residents are disappearing without a trace and nobody knows who's behind it. Meanwhile, a darkness is approaching Ichigo and his friends in Karakura Town.

Bleach (2004)

COMMENTS

  1. (PDF) Character: A Developmental System

    Essays on moral development. Vol. 2: The psychol-ogy of moral development. San Francisco, CA: Harper and Row. ... When analysing character development, although at times inconsistent, it becomes ...

  2. Accelerating Progress: A New Era of Research on Character Development

    Adolescent character development is a high priority for educators, policymakers, and front-line youth workers. To meet this growing demand, and as exemplified in the five articles in this special section, character development scholars are drawing from a range of academic disciplines to push beyond the traditional boundaries of the science of character development. These articles highlight ...

  3. Full article: Systematic review of character development in low- and

    Character strengths and development is one of the most important and influential areas of positive psychology. Yet most of this research involves - as per the field generally - research in high income countries, with relatively little awareness of its dynamics in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). However, there is a burgeoning ...

  4. The Practice of Character Strengths: Unifying Definitions, Principles

    Introduction. Over 700 studies on the VIA Classification published in the last 10 years; over 15 million surveys administered (VIA Institute, 2021); steeply increasing annual usage of the VIA Survey: all reflect a unique precedence of both scholarship and popularity around advancing the science and practice of character strengths. Despite being a young science, there is substantial scientific ...

  5. Character development among youth: Linking lives in time and place

    Abstract. This article embeds the study of character development within the two-decades-long research program framed by the Lerner and Lerner model of positive youth development. Character development involves attaining the feelings, thoughts, and skills needed to act coherently across time and place to serve self and others in mutually ...

  6. Character development and self-esteem: Psychological foundations and

    1.. IntroductionCharacter education has emerged as the most popular term used to designate the teaching of values and morality. Since the 1980s, traditionalists such as Bennett (1993), Kilpatrick (1992), Ryan (1996), and Wynne (1989) have proposed a distinctive notion of character education as an alternative to approaches based on the principles of values clarification (Raths et al., 1978) and ...

  7. PDF Accelerating Progress: A New Era of Research on Character Development

    Each of the articles in this special section offer to lay the groundwork for exciting new lines of research in character development. There is still much to be discovered about the nature of character development and how it is cultivated. As we noted at the outset of this article, we are at an in ection. fl.

  8. PDF Purpose and Character Development in Early Adolescence

    This study examines the developmental relations between purpose and three other key character strengths that emerge during early adoles-cence: gratitude, compassion, and grit. We analyzed survey. (n 1005, 50.1% female, 24.1% Caucasian, 43.6% African. =.

  9. (PDF) Character Strength Development: Perspectives from ...

    Abstract. Character Strength Development: Perspectives from Positive Psychology aims to document research and evidence-based practices in positive psychology with specific focus on character ...

  10. Editorial: VIA Character Strengths: Theory, Research and Practice

    Since the introduction of positive psychology (Seligman and Csikszentmihalyi, 2000), the study of Character Strengths (CS) has been at the forefront of research on human well-being and optimal functioning.Originally developed to provide the field with a foundation for research on what enables and promotes good character and the good life (Peterson and Seligman, 2004), the CS and virtue ...

  11. Systematic review of character development and childhood chronic

    Abstract. AIM: To review empirical evidence on character development among youth with chronic illnesses. METHODS: A systematic literature review was conducted using PubMed and PSYCHINFO from inception until November 2013 to find quantitative studies that measured character strengths among youth with chronic illnesses.

  12. Commencing character: A case study of character development in college

    Her research focuses on character development in higher education, developmental character measurement, and intellectual humility. Sara E. Mendonça. Sara E. Mendonça (PhD) is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Program for Leadership and Character and Department of Psychology at Wake Forest University. Her research focuses on character development ...

  13. Implementing and Assessing Evidence-Based Character Education

    Abstract. Those who implement character education initiatives intend for those initiatives to be effective in promoting the development of character. To maximize this likelihood, it is important to consider common problems of implementation and assessment. This article addresses four challenges to effective implementation: (a) what counts as ...

  14. 1 Introduction

    This document summarizes a workshop that reviewed research and practice on character education, with a focus on out-of-school programs. It covers topics such as defining and measuring character, identifying effective features and practices, and exploring methodological issues.

  15. PDF Building character through literacy with children's literature

    This study explores how to teach character traits such as honesty, respect, and kindness through high quality children's literature in grades K-6. It defines the characteristics of an effective character development program and discusses the benefits and challenges of integrating literature into the curriculum.

  16. Accelerating Progress: A New Era of Research on Character Development

    Abstract. Adolescent character development is a high priority for educators, policymakers, and front-line youth workers. To meet this growing demand, and as exemplified in the five articles in this special section, character development scholars are drawing from a range of academic disciplines to push beyond the traditional boundaries of the ...

  17. Student Character Development: Relationships, Resources, and Considerations

    This case study examination assessed the significant contributions of college resources regarding students' character development within a liberal arts institutional setting. The effects of attributed contributions from various interactions and experiences are analyzed within the context of Astin's [1] input-environment-outcome model. Data elements from student participants in their senior ...

  18. The influence of parenting on building character in adolescents

    Character in adolescents grows and develops in accordance with the socialization space of the youth concerned. Character itself is a representation of personality that appears to be behavior (Rezvani and Miri, 2021). The development of the youth character itself starts from childhood; parenting and family care.

  19. The importance of character development in scientific research

    One of the fundamental pleasures of our jobs as professors running university research labs is to see young people come, not quite knowing who they are, and grow into scientists. They acquire knowledge and skills; sure, you can't do without those. But that has little to do with the small thrill we get the first time they see something we missed, bring a new idea, tell us why we're wrong or ...

  20. The effectiveness of character education on student behavior

    the youth. The word "character" originates from the Greek meaning "to make a mark on," such as to have made an impression or to be remembered for. Having good character refers to behaving in a positive manner and developing positive virtues and habits. In 2008, the Character Education Partnership (CEP), defined character as "human

  21. Character Development Research Papers

    Objective of the research is analyzing and develop aspects of the character's formulation and kinetic design to gain access to a few standards that must be considered during the design of the advertising character based on the message of the ad. research importance is to develop standards for Advertising character formation's variables ...

  22. (PDF) Creating Fictional Characters: The Role of Experience

    Creating Fictional Characters: The Role of Experience, Personality, and Social Processes. Marta M. Maslej. McMaster University. Keith Oatley. University of Toronto. Raymond A. Mar. York University ...

  23. The Practice of Character Strengths: Unifying Definitions, Principles

    The most straightforward character strengths process is the three-phase model, Aware-Explore-Apply (Niemiec, 2014) which entails: first, raising awareness of a character strength the client was previously unaware of or had limited use of; next, co-exploring the character strength with questions, activities, reflections, and challenges; and ...

  24. Best Character Developments in Bleach: Thousand Year Blood War

    The Bleach anime series regularly expanded its huge cast of characters with new heroes and villains alike, and plenty of them enjoyed some rich, meaningful character arcs. Even gaining new powers and weapons counted as character development, since Bleach's best heroes often powered up by learning more about themselves and their origins.In other cases, characters became much deeper thanks to ...