Why this matters now

This sub-theme appears as direct questions (role of family/society/education) and supplies the quotations and examples that strengthen answers across the whole paper. Lessons from leaders’ lives are a recurring 150-word question.

Family
First school
Terminal/Instrumental
Types of values
Education
Value-shaping
Role models
Living lessons

What are values?

Values are deep-seated beliefs about what is good and desirable (honesty, compassion, justice, freedom) that act as standards for judging actions. They may be terminal (desired end-states, e.g. peace) or instrumental (desired modes of conduct, e.g. honesty), and they translate into attitudes and behaviour.

Sources of values

Values are absorbed from many sources — the family (the first and most influential school), society and culture, religion, peer groups, educational institutions, role models and leaders, the media, and individual reflection and experience.

Role of family, society and educational institutions

  • Family — the primary agent; children learn honesty, respect, empathy and discipline first at home (socialisation and modelling);
  • Society — peers, community and culture reinforce shared norms and provide a wider moral context;
  • Educational institutions — formal teaching of ethics, plus the “hidden curriculum” of teachers as role models, value education and character-building activities.

Lessons from great lives

The lives of leaders, reformers and administrators are concrete value-lessons: Gandhi (truth, non-violence, simplicity), Ambedkar (social justice, perseverance), Vivekananda (service, self-confidence), Kalam (dedication, integrity), and many honest civil servants who upheld probity under pressure. Such examples, used briefly and aptly, lift GS-4 answers.

UPSC angle

Be ready to argue the role of family vs society vs education in inculcating values, and to cite one or two leaders with the specific value they exemplify. Distinguish terminal and instrumental values.

Frequently asked questions

What are human values?

Enduring beliefs about what is good and desirable (honesty, compassion, justice) that guide a person’s attitudes and conduct.

What are the main sources of values?

Family, society and culture, religion, peer groups, educational institutions, role models, media and personal experience.

What is the role of family in value formation?

The family is the first and most influential agent — children learn honesty, empathy, respect and discipline through socialisation and parental modelling.

How do educational institutions inculcate values?

Through value education, ethics teaching, teachers as role models, and the “hidden curriculum” of school culture and activities.