Find this activity in the student portfolio
Objective: Students will be able to demonstrate empathy and compassion for others.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: Empathy is the ability to put yourself in the shoes of someone else and understand what they are feeling or experiencing.
Building an understanding of what others are feeling, how their own actions can have an impact on others, and why someone might be experiencing feelings at a particular time is an important life skill for students to develop.
It is important for students to learn empathy because it helps them to understand how others feel so they can respond appropriately to a situation. It also helps them build a sense of security and stronger relationships with others.
Empathy encourages tolerance and acceptance of others which will help build a more harmonious class and school environment.
This activity has students place themselves in someone else's shoes. They are asked to brainstorm ways they would show kindness, take another’s perspective, show acceptance, and listen when a friend or relative is going through a difficult time.
It might be helpful to offer some examples of difficult times for students, such as when someone has a disagreement with a friend, or gets left out of an activity, or when someone loses something that is special to them.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can help students build empathy and compassion for others:
Find this activity in the student portfolio
Objective: Students will understand and express gratitude.
Estimated Duration: 20-25 minutes
Description: Gratitude is an essential skill for students to understand. Gratitude is focusing on what is good in your life and being thankful for the things that you have.
This positive thinking builds a stronger sense of self inside of students. This makes them want to try harder to be successful in the classroom. Students who are grateful tend to be happier, more optimistic, and have a better social network.
They also tend to give more social support to others as well. Being grateful can translate to increased resilience over time. Resilience helps students to have a sense of purpose as well as enjoyable and connected lives.
This activity will help students identify the things or people that they are grateful for in their lives. Students will write a journal entry about something or someone they are grateful for and tell why they feel thankful.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can help students to understand and express gratitude:
Find this activity in the student portfolio
Objective: Students will be able to understand the importance of helping others and themselves feel a sense of belonging.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: Because students come from a variety of backgrounds and experiences, it is important that each child feels a sense of belonging.
Students who experience a positive sense of belonging are more likely to experience positive engagement and wellbeing. Teaching practices should include lessons that focus on the belief that while we are all different, we are also equal and deserving of inclusion and respect.
All students need and deserve a safe and supportive space that enables learning. Providing students that space sends a powerful message: we all belong.
This activity will allow students to reflect on how they help others feel like they belong. They will rate themselves and share what they can do to make others feels welcome.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can help students feel a sense of belonging:
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Objective: Students will be able to understand how to use a social filter in different situations.
Estimated Duration: 20 minutes
Description: Social norms are the unwritten rules or behaviors that are considered acceptable in a particular social group or culture.
Examples include holding a door open for the person behind you or putting your trash in the garbage instead of throwing it on the ground. Social norms give us an expectation for how to behave in certain situations.
One way to help students become socially aware is to teach them the norm of using a social filter. Using a social filter refers to our ability to assess which thoughts we should say aloud and which ones we should keep to ourselves based on the situation are in and the people we are with.
It involves thinking before speaking to ensure we are not saying something inappropriate or hurtful to ourselves and others. Using a social filter can help students build their conversation skills as well as develop and maintain positive relationships with others.
This activity will allow students to practice using a social filter. They will write about a situation when a social filter is needed and then record what they may think versus what they should say.
Teachable Moments: There are many ways you can help students to use a social filter:
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.