Find this activity in the student portfolio
Objective: Students will be able to use their body language to communicate more effectively.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: Body language is a way that people communicate with each other without using words. Your body language sends messages to others about how you are feeling or what you are thinking.
Sometimes your body language sends positive vibes to people and other times it sends negative vibes. Your facial expressions and the way you move your hands, shoulders, and arms gives clues to how you are feeling. Teaching students to be aware of their own body language as well as how to read others’ can help them communicate more effectively.
This activity will help students think about their own body language and the messages it sends to others. They will record examples of positive and negative body language and reflect on the effect it can have on others' feelings.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can help students to understand the messages their body language sends.
Find this activity in the student portfolio
Objective: Students will be able to understand how to develop healthy relationships.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: Friendships have an enormous impact on students' mental health and happiness. The need for belonging is sometimes so strong that negative relationships may result. Too often, students form relationships that are unhealthy, and issues associated with unhealthy relationships can be the cause of any number of problems in the classroom and the school. Teaching students to trust their feelings when it comes to friends will help them develop positive relationships with their peers.
This activity asks students to build a best friend. They will include what qualities they look for in a best friend and how a true friend makes them feel.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can help students to develop healthy relationships:
Find this activity in the student portfolio
Objective: Students will be able to identify ways to resolve conflicts constructively.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: Conflicts can cause stress, anger, feelings of resentments, and can make it difficult to focus. Learning skills to help deal with conflict resolution is crucial.
It’s important to teach students how to appropriately manage conflicts to make the situation better and de-escalate moments of high emotions. Conflicts can be difficult to navigate because they bring out big and intense emotions that can be hard for students to process.
One of the best ways to deal with conflict is to talk it out and take turns with the others involved, sharing how each person feels. Students can do this by using I-Statements.
For example, saying I felt sad when you did something, or I felt angry when you did this, and I need you to help me do something in the future, or I need you to speak to me differently in the future.
This activity will have students list the strategies they have used or would like to use to deal with conflict. This will help them when they deal with conflict in the future. Next, students will practice using I-Statements, so they will be prepared when during their next conflict.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can help students to resolve conflicts constructively:
Find this activity in the student portfolio
Objective: Students will be able to recognize and communicate leadership skills in themselves and others.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: It is important for students to learn and build on their leadership skills to open new possibilities and help make better decisions. Leadership is a multi-faceted skill that helps students learn to communicate, empathize with others, solve problems, and to work in teams. Leadership skills help you understand yourself, your motivations, and your emotions. As you lead, you learn your values, you create your meaning, and you connect with others.
Good and effective leadership is a skill that can be learned, practiced, and improved on. Most think of the loud and confident personalities as the obvious leaders, but anyone even the quiet, shy kid in class can be a leader. In fact, it is likely that at some point in their life, everyone will be called upon to lead in some way or another. For this reason, it is crucial that we help students learn how to prepare for these leadership roles.
This activity helps students think about how they lead and speak assertively, or with confidence. They are asked to write or cut out words that they can use to speak assertively, to bring out their inner lion!
Teachable Moments: To help students build their leadership skills:
Estimated Duration: 25-30 minutes
Go to other SEL competencies in this book (Intermediate - Grades 3–4):
The teaching suggestions only work in accompaniment with the student portfolio, which has all the activity pages.
The teaching suggestions here are also available within a PDF of the entire teacher's manual.