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Objective: Students will be able to identify who they are, what they like and dislike, and recognize their strengths and weaknesses.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: Self-identity is how you identify and define yourself. It is made up of many parts including your values, beliefs, personality traits, physical attributes, abilities, hobbies, and interests.
It is the combination of these things that make up your self-identity. It’s important to have a strong sense of self-identity to be able to adapt to changes and overcome challenges.
Having a strong sense of who you are can help anchor you during uncertain times and help you develop positive self-esteem.
When helping children discover their self-identity, it is important to encourage them to look at all the things that make them who they are and not to identify with just one part of themselves.
When children tie themselves firmly to just one part of who they are, they can struggle to find their self-identity if they experience failure or are not successful in that one part. Knowing that they are so much more can help them develop a strong sense of self-identify.
This activity will allow students to think about who they are at this moment in time. They will document their values, beliefs, personality, culture, and the many other things that make them who they are.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can improve and build self-identity in your students:
Find this activity in the student portfolio
Objective: Students will be able to identify the range of emotions they have.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: Emotional awareness is the ability to notice, accurately name, and interpret our emotions. It is an important skill students need to be successful in life.
Emotional awareness helps us know what we need and want (or don't want!) and helps to build better relationships. That's because being aware of our emotions can help us talk about feelings more clearly, avoid and resolve conflicts appropriately, and move past difficult feelings more easily.
Many children can express being happy, sad, or mad, but often they miss the subtle gradations or shades in emotions. This is because they don’t have the words to describe them.
Naming emotions accurately helps students be clearer about what is happening inside, so they can manage themselves in positive ways and become better learners.
This activity will help students build their emotional vocabulary. First, they will choose one emotion and list its shades (e.g., happy, joyful, elated). Next, they will draw a face to show what that emotion looks like and describe what makes them feel that shade.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can help students identify their emotions:
Find this activity in the student portfolio
Objective: Students will be able to build self-esteem.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: Self-esteem is a person’s sense of worth. Students with high self-esteem feel confident and capable. They value themselves and their abilities.
When students feel confident and secure, they are more likely to succeed in school and achieve personal goals. They are also more likely to motivate themselves to take on new challenges and cope with and learn from mistakes. They may stand up for themselves more and ask for help when they need it.
This activity will help students build self-esteem by having them draw or write about situations that they felt very proud of themselves. They can bookmark the page to come back to for a little boost of confidence throughout the year.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can improve and build self-esteem in your students:
Find this activity in the student portfolio
Objective: Students will be able to build a growth mindset.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: A growth mindset is when you believe your intelligence and abilities can be improved with practice and the power of growing your brain. It is important for students to learn to adopt a growth mindset because it can help them overcome obstacles when they learn something new or develop a new skill. When students use a growth mindset, they understand the importance of persistence and determination. They see roadblocks and constructive feedback as methods to gather information to help themselves learn and progress. Instead of giving up in the face of challenges, students with a growth mindset keep going because they believe they can achieve the goal.
This activity will help students build a growth mindset by writing a collection of daily affirmations that they can use to help overcome self-sabotaging and negative thoughts.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can help improve and build a growth mindset in your students:
Estimated Duration: 25-30 minutes
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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.