A normative character is a fictional character who embodies or represents certain societal norms, values, or expectations. These characters often serve as examples for others to follow or as a contrast to characters who challenge or defy these norms.
It is a type of normative ethics that describes developing good character habits and traits.
Virtue Theory
Normative characters, as the term implies, work as stand-ins for the reader. Other characters in a story may conceal their motives or behave deceptively, but a normative character offers the reader opportunity to identify with someone who steers a clear course through the events of the plot. When normative characters narrate the story, they seem to possess clarity of vision and hold values sufficiently like the reader's to make them dependable reporters. When they are actors within a story recounted in third-person narration, normative characters display traits meant to resemble similar ones readers find in themselves. (Reilly 122-123)
Normative theory provides the collection of financial information.
Educational planning consists of the normative, strategic and operational stages. The normative stage is the one in which policies are developed and formed.
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article about develpment of normative system with in school
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normative theories are those theories which tell a way how should media govern.
Normative ethics is concerned with establishing moral standards or norms for evaluating actions as right or wrong, whereas non-normative ethics focuses on describing and analyzing ethical concepts, beliefs, and behaviors without prescribing what ought to be done. In simpler terms, normative ethics tells us what is right or wrong, while non-normative ethics explores the nature of ethics.
what ought to be