Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan
Transcription
Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan
Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Breathing Exercises Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre K - 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: Children will identify how to identify an angry feeling in themselves and in others. Lesson: In this lesson plan children will learn how to breathe deeply and practice relaxation. Directions: 1. Collect things that smell good. IDEAS: A cotton ball with vanilla extract. Pine cones. Peppermint candy. Scented candles. Scratch and sniff stickers. Orange or lemon zest. Air freshener sprayed onto a paper towel. 2. Ask the children to choose a scent they like and then take 5 deep breaths through their nose. With each breath silently count to three then exhale. The smell will encourage the children to take deep breaths through the nose. 3. Have the children exhale slowly each time they take a deep breath. 4. Additionally; you can use candles as a way to practice breathing out. Have the children hold unlit candles in front of them and pretend to blow out the flame. 5. Next have the children close their eyes and think about something that makes them calm. Create a picture of the idea or thing that makes them calm. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities The I feel … Chart Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre K - 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/ Concepts: Children will identify their emotions. Materials: The worksheets The Emotion Chart for Girls and The Emotion Chart for Boys. Lesson: Pass out the charts (boy charts to boys and girl charts to girls) and have your students record how they feel each day, for one week. Ask them to write one thing they did because of that feeling. At the end of the week talk about how they felt during the week. What emotions were the strongest? Hints: It may be helpful to attach the charts inside of a daily journal. Use the charts like weather charts. Collect data about emotions and make a classroom emotion chart using the results of the individual charts. On a field trip everyone may have been happy, but on a rainy day many children may have felt sad, frustrated or angry. Make correlations between events and emotions and what can be done when children feel unhappy. In circle time for pre-k students ask students to hold up their charts and tell how they felt today. Special Education: For SPED students with difficulty understanding facial expressions, check the facial expression. Be sure it matches the emotion experienced. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Discussion Questions After watching the video, ask students to write their answers to the following questions on a separate piece of paper or discuss the questions in a group or one on one setting. Learning Styles: Auditory, Verbal Intelligences: Verbal/Linguistic, Interpersonal Catch Your Anger, Then Cool Off 1. Can anger make you do or say things that are hurtful? 2. What are a few of the ways Katie can tell she is feeling angry? 3. What happened differently when Katie caught her angry feelings? 4. What are some ways that you can tell that you are getting angry? 5. How did Katie cool off? Can you think of other ways to cool off? Move Your Body 1. How did walking away help Anthony at the playground? 2. How did Anthony cool off? 3. What are some other ways you can move your body to cool off? 4. Have you ever felt angry at someone like Anthony did? What did you do? What did you learn by watching Anthony handle his anger? Talk About Your Angry Feelings 1. What happened to Sue when her brother and friend came into the room? 2. When Sue told her friend about her angry feelings what happened? 3. Why is it a good thing to tell a grown up about your angry feelings? General discussion: Name one way you will try to catch your anger the next time you get angry. Tell a friend how it made you feel the last time your were angry. Listen to your friend tell you what it was like when they got angry Does your body feel different when you are angry? Look in the mirror and make an angry face then count to ten. How did counting to ten make you feel? What are some words you use to describe feeling angry? © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan DISCUSSION QUESTIONS ANSWER KEY: Catch Your Anger, Then Cool Off 1. Can anger make you do or say things that are hurtful? Yes. It can lead to hurting others physically and mentally. 2. What are a few of the ways Katie can tell she is feeling angry? Her tummy hurts, her muscles get tight, she breathes fast. 3. What happened differently when Katie caught her angry feelings? She was able to say what happened, and while she was still angry, no one else was hurt with words or hands. 4. What are some ways that you can tell that you are getting angry? This is subjective. Let children express how they know they are getting angry. 5. How did Katie cool off? Can you think of other ways to cool off? She counted to ten. Say the alphabet. Allow children to answer in any way they see fit within reason. Move Your Body 1. How did walking away help Anthony at the playground? He was able to avoid saying or doing anything hurtful. 2. How did Anthony cool off? He walked away and then did chin ups. 3. What are some other ways you can move your body to cool off? This is subjective. Let children express how they can cool off. 4. Have you ever felt angry at someone like Anthony did? What did you do? What did you learn by watching Anthony handle his anger? This is subjective. Let children express answers one at a time. Talk About Your Angry Feelings 1. What happened to Sue when her brother and friend came into the room? Sue got angry at her brother and friend because they bossed her around and took the tv. DISCLAIMER Mazzarella Media has provided this Teaching Guide to enhance your learning experience. Reviews, questions and resources within this Teaching Guide are not endorsed by DVD producers. Links to outside Web pages do not constitute an endorsement of the sites by Mazzarella Media nor does Mazzarella Media maintain the sites. Links are included at the discretion of the editors and are intended as a service to readers. We urge you to exercise care and parental guidance when visiting Web sites. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan 2. When Sue told her friend about her angry feelings what happened? When Sue explained how she felt, she calmed down and caught her anger. 3. Why is it a good thing to tell a grown up about your angry feelings? Sometimes grown up can resolve a situation that made you angry. It also helps you to cool down. General discussion: Name one way you will try to catch your anger the next time you get angry. Tell a friend how it made you feel the last time your were angry. Listen to your friend tell you what it was like when they got angry Does your body feel different when you are angry? Look in the mirror and make an angry face then count to ten. How did counting to ten make you feel? What are some words you use to describe feeling angry? These questions have no specific answers. Allow for expression and where groups are called for, keep them small. DISCLAIMER Mazzarella Media has provided this Teaching Guide to enhance your learning experience. Reviews, questions and resources within this Teaching Guide are not endorsed by DVD producers. Links to outside Web pages do not constitute an endorsement of the sites by Mazzarella Media nor does Mazzarella Media maintain the sites. Links are included at the discretion of the editors and are intended as a service to readers. We urge you to exercise care and parental guidance when visiting Web sites. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Mad Maze NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Help the monsters go from angry to calm by finding your way through this maze. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan DIRECTIONS: Color in the thermometer with calm colors at the bottom and angry colors at the top. List three things that make you mad, and then list three things that make you calm. © 2009 Skill Building Buddies Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Stop and Think Cards Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre K - 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: An activity to reinforce the concept Stop and Think. Materials: Printable Stop and Think Cards (included below) Pencils Crayons or markers Magazines with pictures of people to cut out Directions: 1. At the top of each card there is an event listed. On the blank cards, have students create their own events either imaginary or from their experience. 2. List solutions under the word STOP to resolve the event. 3. Cut out pictures from the magazines that illustrate part or the entire event. 4. Place some of the cards on a bulletin board and allow the children to compare how their classmates solved the problem. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lisa is in school finishing a worksheet. She leant Kevin her pencil but now he won’t give it back. Lisa gets angry and feels like she will flip her lid… LISA STOPS What could happen next? © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Cory has been working all day cleaning the garage. His mother promised him a trip to the park when he was finished. When he is done, he tells her but she seems to have forgotten her promise. Cory stomps away… CORY STOPS What could happen next? © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Mary and her sister are saving together to buy a toy. Mary sees her sister spend her allowance at the ice cream truck and gets very angry… MARY STOPS What could happen next? © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Ray’s three friends want to swim but Ray wants to ride bikes. Ray starts to shout at his friends that they never do what he wants to do … RAY STOPS What could happen next? © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Problem: _________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________ _______ STOPS What could happen next? © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Stop and Think Signs Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre K - 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: An activity for visual reinforcement of the concept Stop and Think. Materials: Printable stop sign (included below) Blunted craft sticks Glue Crayons or markers Directions: 1. Color the octagon on one with the word STOP on it. 2. Color the other side of the stop sign with THINK on it. Hints: Ask children to consider what color a stop sign is. Should stop be that color? What color would work best for think? 3. Cut out the octagon. 4. Paste the blunted craft stick on one side of the octagon and let dry. 5. Ask the children to hold up their signs to the appropriate side while your read a book like Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day, or Where the Wild Things Are. When the characters are angry emphasize the STOP. When the characters are working out solutions, emphasize the THINK. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Additional Lessons and Activities for Your Child’s Learning Style Visual (seeing) – Use a mirror practice what it looks like and how it feels to be angry. Auditory (hearing) – Play the angry words bingo game. Experiential (feeling, internalizing) – Talk about the last time someone got angry. What would have happened if they had used Stop and Think? Kinesthetic (movement and tactile) – Sing the song, “If You’re Angry and Know it.” (sung to the tune, If You’re Happy and Know it”. Let the children add the motion in like stamp your foot, take a breath, say, “I’m Mad!” or whatever they feel expresses being mad. Learn More! Books and Online Resources BOOKS When Sophie Gets Angry-Really, Really Angry, by Molly Bang Angry Octopus: An Anger Management Story, introducing active progressive muscular relaxation and deep breathing by Lori Lite Goldie Is Mad. Eliane Whitehouse Angry Children: Understanding and Helping Your Child Regain Control, by Michael R. Emlet ONLINE RESOURCES When Sophie gets angry--really, really http://www.childrenslibrary.org/icdl/BookReader?bookid=bngwhns_00260007&twoPage=true&rout e=text&size=0&fullscreen=false&pnum1=1&lang=English&ilang=English When Sophie gets angry--really, really angry is an online book with dramatic illustrations Get Your Angries Out http://www.angriesout.com/ Take up The Anger Challenge and feel better about yourself and be happier in your relationships. Make choices to let go of those ugly mads and angries. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary (Grades 2-3) Try the following activities with the vocabulary words to the right. Depending on the age and ability of your students, they may be able to complete assignments from multiple grade levels. 1-2: Verbally speak each word and explain what it means. Use it in a sentence that makes sense to them. 3-5: Look up each word in a dictionary, and write down its definition. Write each word in a sentence, or write a paragraph using the words. Vocabulary Problem Emotion Stop Think Relax Breathe Deep Mad Imagine Feelings Problem – ______________________________________________________________________________ Emotion – ______________________________________________________________________________ Stop – ______________________________________________________________________________ Think ______________________________________________________________________________ Relax – ______________________________________________________________________________ Breathe Deep – ______________________________________________________________________________ Mad – ______________________________________________________________________________ Imagine – ______________________________________________________________________________ Feelings – ______________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary What do these words mean? 1. Act 3 of these words in front of a mirror or your class 2. Write the word and think about what it means. 3. Draw a picture of yourself doing or feeling one of these words. Relax/Relax////////////////// Stop/Stop/////////////////// Think/Think////////////////// Emotion/Emotion///////////// Feelings//Feelings//////////// ///////////////////// © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Discussion Questions After watching the video, ask students to write their answers to the following questions on a separate piece of paper or discuss the questions in a group or one on one setting. Learning Styles: Auditory, Verbal Intelligences: Verbal/Linguistic, Interpersonal Hands Down, Use Your Words 1. What lead up to Lucy and Jen poking each other? 2. How did Lucy handle being poked at first? 3. How did Lucy use her words? 4. How did Jen use her words? Don’t Blame, Ask Question 1. What does blaming do? 2. What happened when Danny came home and saw his brother Alex playing with the race cars? 3. When Danny asked questions did it change what happened next? How? 4. What other questions could Danny have asked to keep from blaming Alex? Try Different Ideas 1. When Grace and Sam were drawing what happened when they both wanted the same chalk color? 2. What was the first idea Grace had. 3. What idea did Grace and Sam come up to solve the problem? 4. Is the first idea always the best? What is the best idea for solving a problem? General discussion: What is a common problem at your house that makes you mad? Could you solve it by using words? Asking questions? Trying a different idea? Does blaming someone for doing something help or hurt? Why? How can you tell you need a new idea to get along with someone? © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan DISCUSSION QUESTIONS ANSWER KEY: What is Anger 1. What made Sara feel mad? She found a hole in her sock, it took a long time to find her shoe, and the laces had knots. 2. What happens to your body when you get angry? You get tense your tummy hurts your face gets red you grit your teeth. (There may be others) 3. What are some ways that you can tell you are feeling angry? This answer is subjective. Let children answer in a way that makes sense to them. 4. What is another word for angry? Mad 5. When Sara got too mad, what happened? She threw her shoe and it broke the light. Stop and Think 1. What could happen if you get too mad? You can hurt yourself or others. 2. What made Mike was mad? He wanted to take a turn on the swings and the other children were taking a long time. 3. When Mike used Stop and Think did it change his mad feelings? How? It helped him stay in control of his angry feelings. 4. Did using Stop and Think help Mike to get what he wanted without saying or doing hurtful things to the other children? How? Yes. Mike was able to simply ask for what he wanted and he got it without hurting himself or anyone else. Just Relax 1. Why is it important to get rid of your angry feelings? When angry feelings get to be too much you might blow your top. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan 2. What made Beth so angry? She was unable to do the new dance without falling down. 3. How did Beth relax? She took some deep breaths and relaxed. 4. What happened after Beth relaxed and got rid of her angry feelings? After she relaxed, she was able to calm down and she could master the dance steps. General discussion: Think of a time you were angry and lost your cool. What happened? How do other people around react when you are angry? Listen to your friend tell you what it was like when they got angry How could you use Stop and Think the next time you are angry? What are 3 ways you can think of to relax and feel calm? These questions all have subjective answers. Allow children to express their stories one at a time. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Additional Lessons and Activities for Your Child’s Learning Style Visual (seeing) – Have your students act out an emotion and let the other students guess which emotion he is acting out. Add angry, mad and frustrated as well as words for calm and thinking. Auditory (hearing) – Have your students listen to some sounds of nature. Think about which sounds of nature sound angry and which sound soothing. Experiential (feeling, internalizing) – Read the story of Peter and Wolf. Ask the children to express and the consequences of the characters that got mad. Kinesthetic (movement and tactile) – Play Dance Away the Mad dance. Play some music and have the children create a dance that helps them get rid of angry energy. Learn More! Books and Online Resources BOOKS What Angry Kids Need, Jennifer Anne Brown, M.S.W. and Pam Provonsha Hopkins, M.S.W. I'm So Mad!, Margie Palatini Goldie Is Mad. Eliane Whitehouse I Was So Mad, Mercer Mayer How To Deal With Anger Julie Fiedler ONLINE RESOURCES It’s my Life - PBS Go http://pbskids.org/itsmylife/parents/resources/anger.html A page of resources for dealing with anger and some video clips of characters dealing with anger. Anger Management in Children http://www.calgaryhealthregion.ca/clin/child/paed/parents/pdf/winter2001.pdf This PDF is a great resource article from the Alberta Children’s Hospital. Topics include: what is anger? Do girls and boys express anger differently? DISCLAIMER Mazzarella Media has provided this Teaching Guide to enhance your learning experience. Reviews, questions and resources within this Teaching Guide are not endorsed by DVD producers. Links to outside Web pages do not constitute an endorsement of the sites by Mazzarella Media nor does Mazzarella Media maintain the sites. Links are included at the discretion of the editors and are intended as a service to readers. We urge you to exercise care and parental guidance when visiting Web sites. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary (Grades 1-3) Try the following activities with the vocabulary words to the right. Depending on the age and ability of your students, they may be able to complete assignments from multiple grade levels. 1-2: Verbally speak each word and explain what it means. Use it in a sentence that makes sense to them. 3-5: Look up each word in a dictionary, and write down its definition. Write each word in a sentence, or write a paragraph using the words. Vocabulary Angry Emotion Stop Think Relax Breathe Deep Mad Imagine Feelings Angry ______________________________________________________________________________ Emotion ______________________________________________________________________________ Stop ______________________________________________________________________________ Think ______________________________________________________________________________ Relax ______________________________________________________________________________ Breathe Deep ______________________________________________________________________________ Mad ______________________________________________________________________________ Imagine ______________________________________________________________________________ Feelings ______________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary (Grades 2-3) Try the following activities with the vocabulary words to the right. Depending on the age and ability of your students, they may be able to complete assignments from multiple grade levels. 1-2: Ask your students to verbally speak each word and explain what it means. Use it in a sentence that makes sense to them. 3-5: Look up each word in a dictionary, and write down its definition. Write each word in a sentence, or write a paragraph using the words. Vocabulary Problem Idea Argue Blame Compromise Solution Mad Ask Problem _____________________________________________________________________________ Idea – _____________________________________________________________________________ Argue – _____________________________________________________________________________ Blame – _____________________________________________________________________________ Compromise – _____________________________________________________________________________ Solution – _____________________________________________________________________________ Mad – _____________________________________________________________________________ Ask _____________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary What do these words mean? 1. Act 3 of these words in front of a mirror or your class 2. Write the word and think about what it means. 3. Draw a picture of yourself doing or feeling one of these words. Idea/Idea//////////////////// Argue/Argue//////////////// Blame/Blame///////////////// Solution/Solution////////////// Compromise//Compromise///// //////////////////////////// © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Hands Down NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Write one word for each letter of the word calm. Example: C: Cozy A: Arms L: Love M: Me C _______________________________________________________ A _______________________________________________________ L _______________________________________________________ M _______________________________________________________ 2. Now draw the image of your words: © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Don’t Blame, Ask Questions NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Think about the following problem. What questions could you ask to settle the problem? You and your friend are playing a game. She decides she wants to play another game but you want to continue. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Music Tames the Savage Beast (or Music to Calm Down By) Grades 3 - 5 NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Listen to 5 different music songs. Be sure there is one classical piece and one piece that is contemporary. Jazz, instrumentals and movie soundtracks are good choices. Now chart the following information: Your current mood: _____________________________________________ Mood Happy Song 1 Song 2 Song 3 Song 4 Song 5 Calm Hyper Anxious Angry No change Based on the information you collected, when you feel angry or mad and want to calm down what would the best music be to listen to? Why?__________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Talking it Out Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre - K - 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: Children will create new solutions for common situations that cause conflicts. Lesson: • Print and distribute the worksheet “What to Do When You Don’t Agree.” Have children discuss the scenario and come up with a solution they can role play out. • Create a mural with butcher block paper. Break your classroom up into teams and have each team work together to illustrate one of the conflicts on the worksheet below. • Create a suggestion jar. Post a “Conflict of the Week”. Encourage children to submit suggestions into the jar to resolve the problem and then read several of them to the class. By reading the suggestions aloud you will encourage children to think about different solutions to one problem. • Break up into teams. Give each team paper and a pencil. One team member will close their eyes and try to draw three shapes by listening to the other team members as they give directions. The goal of this activity is to work together and realize that there is more than one way to solve a problem. • Use small paper bags, crayons and yarn to create puppets. Use the worksheet “What to Do When You Don’t Agree “and have the children use the puppets to play the scenario out. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Hands Down Rainbow Grades K - 2 NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Color in the segments of the rainbow. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Play the Cool Down Detective Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre k - 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: Children will identify how they feel when they are angry and what they can do to cool down. Lesson: 1. Have each student cut out two of the magnifying glasses on the accompanying worksheet. Write one way they know they are feeling angry (tummy ache, tight feeling, clenching fists) on one magnifying glass. Write a way to stay cool on the other magnifying glass (count to 10, recite the alphabet, say a poem etc.) 2. Hide the clues around the room or in an area for children to discover. 3. For younger children: Have them write the clue and then identify if it is an angry feeling, or a way to cool down. 4. For older children: Write the clue on their notebook and try to match up 1 angry feeling and 1 cool down method with the person who wrote it. Have the children ask questions like: What do you do to cool down? How do you know you are angry? Keep asking questions until you find the person who wrote the clue! Children learn to identify angry and cool down techniques, but they also learn how others react to anger and how they cool down. When the activity is complete, you could have children report what they learned to the group. © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan © 2009 Mazzarella Media All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan © 2009 Mazzarella Media All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Discussion Questions After watching the video, ask students to write their answers to the following questions on a separate piece of paper or discuss the questions in a group or one on one setting. Learning Styles: Auditory, Verbal Intelligences: Verbal/Linguistic, Interpersonal What is Anger 1. What made Sara feel mad? 2. What happens to your body when you get angry? 3. What are some ways that you can tell you are feeling angry? 4. What is another word for angry? 5. When Sara got too mad, what happened? Stop and Think 1. What could happen if you get too mad? 2. What made Mike was mad? 3. When Mike used Stop and Think did it change his mad feelings? How? 4. Did using Stop and Think help Mike to get what he wanted without saying or doing hurtful things to the other children? How? Just Relax 1. Why is it important to get rid of your angry feelings? 2. What made Beth so angry. 3. How did Beth relax? 4. What happened after Beth relaxed and got rid of her angry feelings? General discussion: Think of a time you were angry and lost your cool. What happened? How do other people around react when you are angry? Listen to your friend tell you what it was like when they got angry How could you use Stop and Think the next time you are angry? What are 3 ways you can think of to relax and feel calm? DISCLAIMER Mazzarella Media has provided this Teaching Guide to enhance your learning experience. Reviews, questions and resources within this Teaching Guide are not endorsed by DVD producers. Links to outside Web pages do not constitute an endorsement of the sites by Mazzarella Media nor does Mazzarella Media maintain the sites. Links are included at the discretion of the editors and are intended as a service to readers. We urge you to exercise care and parental guidance when visiting Web sites. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan DISCUSSION QUESTIONS ANSWER KEY: What is Anger 1. What made Sara feel mad? She found a hole in her sock, it took a long time to find her shoe, and the laces had knots. 2. What happens to your body when you get angry? You get tense your tummy hurts your face gets red you grit your teeth. (There may be others) 3. What are some ways that you can tell you are feeling angry? This answer is subjective. Let children answer in a way that makes sense to them. 4. What is another word for angry? Mad 5. When Sara got too mad, what happened? She threw her shoe and it broke the light. Stop and Think 1. What could happen if you get too mad? You can hurt yourself or others. 2. What made Mike was mad? He wanted to take a turn on the swings and the other children were taking a long time. 3. When Mike used Stop and Think did it change his mad feelings? How? It helped him stay in control of his angry feelings. 4. Did using Stop and Think help Mike to get what he wanted without saying or doing hurtful things to the other children? How? Yes. Mike was able to simply ask for what he wanted and he got it without hurting himself or anyone else. Just Relax 1. Why is it important to get rid of your angry feelings? When angry feelings get to be too much you might blow your top. DISCLAIMER Mazzarella Media has provided this Teaching Guide to enhance your learning experience. Reviews, questions and resources within this Teaching Guide are not endorsed by DVD producers. Links to outside Web pages do not constitute an endorsement of the sites by Mazzarella Media nor does Mazzarella Media maintain the sites. Links are included at the discretion of the editors and are intended as a service to readers. We urge you to exercise care and parental guidance when visiting Web sites. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan 2. What made Beth so angry? She was unable to do the new dance without falling down. 3. How did Beth relax? She took some deep breaths and relaxed. 4. What happened after Beth relaxed and got rid of her angry feelings? After she relaxed, she was able to calm down and she could master the dance steps. General discussion: Think of a time you were angry and lost your cool. What happened? How do other people around react when you are angry? Listen to your friend tell you what it was like when they got angry How could you use Stop and Think the next time you are angry? What are 3 ways you can think of to relax and feel calm? These questions all have subjective answers. Allow children to express their stories one at a time. DISCLAIMER Mazzarella Media has provided this Teaching Guide to enhance your learning experience. Reviews, questions and resources within this Teaching Guide are not endorsed by DVD producers. Links to outside Web pages do not constitute an endorsement of the sites by Mazzarella Media nor does Mazzarella Media maintain the sites. Links are included at the discretion of the editors and are intended as a service to readers. We urge you to exercise care and parental guidance when visiting Web sites. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Move like a … NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: 1. Do you look like a lion when you are angry? Do you feel like a volcano about to explode? Do you stomp like an elephant? Draw a picture of what you look like when you are angry. 2. Act out what you drew and let others guess what you feel like when you are angry. Next time you are angry move around like the thing you drew and release that angry energy! © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Move Your Body! Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre k - 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: Children will learn to move to release energy and identify ways to get angry energy out. Lesson: Start with a circle or group discussion about games and actions children can take to get angry energy out. Experiment with the ones below and fill out the chart to show which activities made them feel best. Remind them that if they use that activity (with permission) when they get angry, they are less likely to say or do hurtful things. Jump Rope Give each child a jump rope and a song like this one to sing and record the number of jumps. Engine, engine number 9. Running down Chicago line. If the train should jump the track, How much money do you want back? Head and Shoulders, Knees and Toes Have children touch their head, their shoulders, their knees and then their toes. They should then stamp their feet and repeat as many times as they can. (can be done to the song by the name.) Wall Ball Give children a tennis ball and ask them to throw it against the wall and then catch it. Write the word “mad” or “angry” in Sharpie on the ball to illustrate the point that they are getting throwing away angry energy. Out Run Your Shadow Have the children get angry energy out by running away from their shadow. Of course no one can but it’s fun to try! . © 2009 Mazzarella Media All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Angry Energy Chart Activity Name Jump Rope (5 min) NAME:________________________ DATE: ______________ Head and Shoulders (5 min) Wall Ball (5 min) Outrun Your Shadow (5 min) Describe in the boxes under each activity, how it made you feel to Compare your answers with others and decide what activity helps to get you angry energy out. Describe which activity made you feel the best. ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________ What are some other ways to get your angry energy out? ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Additional Lessons and Activities for Your Child’s Learning Style Visual (seeing) – Create paper plate masks to express anger. On the other side of the plate create a calm face. Make a STOP sign with the word THINK on it to remind children to stop and think. Auditory (hearing) – Make a circle and pass a bean bag around from child to child. When the leader says, Stop! the person holding the bean bag should show everyone how to breathe deeply and be calm. Experiential (feeling, internalizing) – Talk about the last time someone got angry. What would have happened if they had used Stop and Think? Kinesthetic (movement and tactile) – Sing the song, “If You’re Angry and Know it.” (sung to the tune, If You’re Happy and Know it”. Let the children add the motion in like stamp your foot, take a breath, say, “I’m Mad!” or whatever they feel expresses being mad. Learn More! Books and Online Resources BOOKS What Angry Kids Need, Jennifer Anne Brown, M.S.W. and Pam Provonsha Hopkins, M.S.W. I'm So Mad!, Margie Palatini Goldie Is Mad. Eliane Whitehouse I Was So Mad, Mercer Mayer How To Deal With Anger Julie Fiedler ONLINE RESOURCES It’s my Life - PBS Go http://pbskids.org/itsmylife/parents/resources/anger.html A page of resources for dealing with anger and some video clips of characters dealing with anger. Get Your Angries Out http://www.angriesout.com/ Take up The Anger Challenge and feel better about yourself and be happier in your relationships. Make choices to let go of those ugly mads and angries. DISCLAIMER Mazzarella Media has provided this Teaching Guide to enhance your learning experience. Reviews, questions and resources within this Teaching Guide are not endorsed by DVD producers. Links to outside Web pages do not constitute an endorsement of the sites by Mazzarella Media nor does Mazzarella Media maintain the sites. Links are included at the discretion of the editors and are intended as a service to readers. We urge you to exercise care and parental guidance when visiting Web sites. © 2009 Mazzarella Media Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary What do these words mean? 1. Act 3 of these words in front of a mirror or your class 2. Write the word and think about what it means. 3. Draw a picture of yourself doing or feeling one of these words. Mad/Mad////////////////// Exercise/Exercise///////////// //////////////////////////// Control/Control////////////// //////////////////////////// Tell/Tell///////////////////// © 2009 Mazzarella Media Visit our website at www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary (Grades 1-3) Try the following activities with the vocabulary words to the right. Depending on the age and ability of your students, they may be able to complete assignments from multiple grade levels. 1-2: Ask your students to verbally speak each word and explain what it means. Use it in a sentence that makes sense to them. 3-5: Look up each word in a dictionary, and write down its definition. Write each word in a sentence, or write a paragraph using the words. Vocabulary Anger Mad Cool off Control Flip your lid Angry energy Walk away Exercise Tell Anger – _____________________________________________________________________________ Mad – _____________________________________________________________________________ Cool off – _____________________________________________________________________________ Control – _____________________________________________________________________________ Flip your lid – _____________________________________________________________________________ Angry energy – _____________________________________________________________________________ Walk away – _____________________________________________________________________________ Exercise _____________________________________________________________________________ Tell – _____________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Catch the Anger and Cool Down Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre k - 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: Children will identify how to identify an angry feeling in themselves and in others. Lesson: Use the worksheet below and have the children draw a picture of what it feels like when you are angry. Encourage expression of all kinds. Have the children explain in front of the class or a trusted adult, about the picture. Ask questions about where anger is felt. Is it in the face? Do their hands clench? Does their tummy hurt? Do they feel hot? The Cool Down Game Pass around a cool ice pack or Ziploc bag with ice in it. Have the children put the ice pack on a clothed part of their body and then count to 10 slowly. Remind them that just like it takes a little while for the cool to get to their skin, anger takes a little while to cool down inside of you too. You can turn this into a game. Use some cold water washcloths sealed in a Ziploc bag and divide your group up into teams. The starting child says: “I am angry!” She holds the bag while counting silently in her head for ten seconds then tosses it to the next person and says, “I have cooled down.” In your classroom, you may want to keep a cool down cloth with the numbers 1 – 10 written in Sharpie on it. When tempers flare, pass them the cloth as a reminder that it is time to cool down. Sometimes a kinesthetic reminder works when words are forgotten. © 2009 Mazzarella Media All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan When I Am Mad I Look Like … NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Do you look like a lion when you are angry? Do you feel like a volcano about to explode? Do you stomp like an elephant? Draw a picture of what you look like when you are angry. © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Angry as … A Language Worksheet About Anger Grades 3 - 5 NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Fill in or discuss the answers to each question below. There are many ways to say you are angry and many expressions of anger in language. Here are some common expressions and idioms. What do they mean? Write each in a sentence. Angry as a hornet ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ Mad as a bear _______________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ Seeing red __________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ Hopping mad ________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ In a black mood ______________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ Flip your lid __________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ Blow a fuse _________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ Hot under the collar ___________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ Makes my blood boil ___________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ Bonus: More heat than light ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan The Last Time I Was Really Mad NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Fill in or discuss the answers to each question below. 1. The last time I was really angry was when _____________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ 2. I Responded by saying or doing this: __________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ 3. Could you have done or said something different? ________Yes ________No 4. Explain what could have been done or said differently. ______________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ 4. When you feel angry what are three things you can do calm down? 1. _______________________________________ 2. _______________________________________ 3. _______________________________________ 5. How does being angry make people around you feel? ______________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ 6. What can you say to let people know you are angry? _______________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan A Language Worksheet about Changing NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Fill in or discuss the answers to each question below. Events and things all around us are changing all the time. Write a sentence about the transition between each of these events. A spider moves to a branch. Later she catches a fly. What was the transition? ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ A caterpillar turns into a butterfly. What was the transition? ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ A boy woke with tangled hair but went to school with untangled hair. What was the transition? ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ A girl was hungry and 15 minutes later, she was full. What was the transition? ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ The sky was dark and then it was light. What was the transition? ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Preparing For Change Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre k - 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: Time Management Lesson: Part I Begin this lesson by identifying fixed times of the day for certain activities. (i.e Circle time is always at 8:30am, lunch is always at 11:30am, recess is always 12:00pm etc.) Have your children fill in the clocks below with the correct time, and then below each clock write how they can prepare for the transition. Examples: Lunch I can wash my hands Recess Library I can get my jacket on I can get out my book Science Journal I can open my science folder I can get my journal from my desk. Have the students write in the time of the event and then what they can do to transition into the event. Use the worksheet below. Part II Ask your students to extend the activity by planning an event and then planning a transition to it. Example: I love to play in the snow. When I want to play in the snow first I have to ____________. Next I have to _________. Finally I can play in the snow! Use the worksheet below as a guide. Have each child write something they like to do down on a piece of paper. Mix up the ideas and then pass them out. Once the worksheet is complete, have each child read their results to the rest of the class. In this way, students can problem solve transitional times they may not have thought about before. © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Time For Change! On the clock below draw in the minute and hour hands for an event at school or home you look forward to. Next write three ways you can get ready for that activity! At _____________o’clock I usually ________________________________________ First I can: _____________________________________________________________ Next I can: _____________________________________________________________ Finally I can: ___________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Name _________________ Transitions I Make Fill in the comic strip below with picture of the best way you can make the transition between two events written. Be creative! Ideas can be found on page 2. © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Transitions I Make, Idea Page Draw your comic pictures of some of these ideas or make up your own. Use as many boxes as you like for each idea and label them. Getting on and off the school bus. Snack time and play time. My turn with a toy and my friend’s turn. Playtime and writing time. Inside time and outside time. Between TV time and dinner time. When I wake up and before I go to school. When I get ready for bed and when I go to sleep. When I get in and after I get out the car. Between the time I play in the park and the time I have to leave. My own ideas: ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Discussion Questions After watching the video, ask students to write their answers to the following questions on a separate piece of paper or discuss the questions in a group or one on one setting. Learning Styles: Auditory, Verbal Intelligences: Verbal/Linguistic, Interpersonal General discussion: In each segment, the children handle a different transition. Ask your students to identify the problem in each chapter and then explain how they handled it. Ask your students to identify one transition that makes them fearful, upset or unhappy. Ask your students to identify one solution that works for them. Which transition in the DVD do they think would work best? For each segment have your students write down one thing they think they could do when they are faced with a similar transition. Have your students act out a skit of each chapter. Are there things they could differently? Would they change anything? Talk about the need for a schedule. Why is it important to be flexible? What can happen if you are not flexible? How do the children in the stories react to surprises? What are some other surprises that can happen during a day? How can you handle them without being upset? Talk about the word transition. What does it mean? Are transitions good? How? Why do we need them? How can our behavior change a transition for the better? For the worse? Answers are subjective and participation should be rewarded with praise. © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Games of Change Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre k - 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: Children will learn how to identify change as a good and fun event. Lesson: Begin this lesson by identifying change as a way to move things forward. Talk about how when we make a transition new and good things can happen. Play Duck Duck Goose Identify the changes during the game as they occur. The whole game is a transitional game. Transition: For younger children this game is good transition practice. Silently waiting for a turn while still participating in the game visually and kinetically shows transitions. Lights Down; New Activity Explain that as an activity is going to end, you will turn down the lights. Make this transitional time an identifier for activity changes and changes in mood. Transition: Good for any activity that needs a transition indicator. Freeze Dance Make a CD with many different types of music on it from classical to rap and rock. Have the children stop dancing when the music stops then start it again with a new type of music or sound. After the game see how many students can count the number of dance transitions there were. Transition: Music types and dance styles change every few minutes. Follow the Leader Children break up into groups of three and spend 5 minutes each as the leader and then the follower. Encourage each “leader” to create a world for his followers to jump into. Dinosaur world, the ocean, the arctic, a jungle, a zoo…the choices are endless. Transition: Children play follower while waiting to be a leader. Worlds change, and movement changes while the game proceeds. © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Additional Lessons and Activities for Your Child’s Learning Style Visual (seeing) – Put on a transition to work play. Ask the children in small groups to explain how they go from active play to working quietly . Auditory (hearing) – Use a harmonica chord to signal a special event. Practice what the children should do when they hear the sound. Experiential (feeling, internalizing) – Use “I feel” statements to share in a circle activity how it feels to go from one activity to another. Learn More! Books and Online Resources BOOKS Oh My Baby Little One by Kathi Appelt It's always hard for Baby Bird and his mama to say good-bye on their way to school and work in the morning. The Complete Book of First Experiences, by Anne Civardi An Usborne book that introduces all kinds of first to little ones – first trip to the doctor, bringing home a new baby for the first time, and the first day of school are amongst the topics covered. Transition Magician 2: More Strategies for Guiding Children in Early Childhood Programs. by Mary Henthorne, Nola Larson, Ruth Chvojicek End the chaos! Be a transition magician! Imagine having fun getting from circle time to lunch, or from outdoors to indoors. The children will learn new skills and you¹ll be able to stay calm. ONLINE RESOURCES Transitions: Getting Kids Attention! http://www.kidactivities.net/post/Transitions-Attention-Getting-Strategies.aspx Many strategies can be used to help a child transition smoothly… The following information is designed to offer some tips and tools for planning effective transitions. Transition Signs http://www.placeofourown.org/activity.php?id=359 In this activity, you’ll learn how you can create signs to help children transition from one activity to another. © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary What do these words mean? 1. Act 3 of these words in front of a mirror or your class 2. Write the word and think about what it means. 3. Draw a picture of yourself doing or feeling one of these words. Calm/Calm////////////////// Change/Change///////////// //////////////////////////// Choice/Choice/////////////// //////////////////////////// Expect/Expect/////////////// ////// ////////////////////// . © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary (Grades 1-3) Try the following activities with the vocabulary words to the right. 1-2: Ask your students to verbally speak each word and explain what it means. Use it in a sentence that makes sense to them. Look up each word in a dictionary, and write down its definition. Write each word in a sentence, or write a paragraph using the words. Vocabulary Transition Change Calm Choice Listen Schedule Disappointed Surprise Expect Transition – _____________________________________________________________________________ Change – _____________________________________________________________________________ Calm – _____________________________________________________________________________ Choice – _____________________________________________________________________________ Listen – _____________________________________________________________________________ Schedule – _____________________________________________________________________________ Disappointed – _____________________________________________________________________________ Surprise _____________________________________________________________________________ Expect – _____________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Transition Words NAME:________________________ DATE: ______________ Use of one the following words or phrased in a sentence that describes a transition. Below it write how the word helped to show the passage of time or the move from one even to the next. Shortly after that At that very moment Meanwhile At last Soon Next Along the way Later that same day Before long During all of this Earlier As soon as After all of that Not a moment too soon Later on While this was happening Eventually Without delay An hour later Immediately _________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazzarella Media. All Rights Reserved. www.mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Discussion Questions After watching the video, ask students to write their answers to the following questions on a separate piece of paper or discuss the questions in a group or one on one setting. Learning Styles: Auditory, Verbal Intelligences: Verbal/Linguistic, Interpersonal Chapter 1 How did it make Tiffany feel to share? Did Tiffany help Megan? Why did she share? Did Marissa want to share? How did Marissa and Tiffany do something together? Do you think Marissa solved the problem well? Why? Chapter 2 Why did Conner share with Darius? What feeling did Conner first have about Darius asking for his car? Do you think they made the right decision? Why? Chapter 3 Why did Devin want from Jack? Did Jack say yes? How did Jack and Devin both get what they wanted? Chapter 4 Why was Maddy nervous? How did talking to Desiree help her? What question did Maddy ask Desiree? What happened because of her question? Chapter 5 How did remaining calm help him to solve the problem? Do you think taking an extra turn was okay? Why? What did Brad learn? © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan How It Feels to Share NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Fill in or discuss the answers to each question below. 1. The last time I shared a favorite toy I felt: ______________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ 2. I responded by saying or doing this: __________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ 3. Could you have done or said something different? ________Yes ________No 4. Explain what could have been done or said differently or why it couldn’t be any different. ___________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ 4. When someone asks you to share what are three things you can do? 1. _______________________________________ 2. _______________________________________ 3. _______________________________________ 5. How do you think sharing makes other people feell? ______________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ 6. How do you feel when people don’t share with you? _______________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Sharing Games Subjects: Grades: Style: Social pre k – 3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: Children will learn how to identify sharing as a beneficial and fun experience. Lesson: Start this lesson with a discussion on the benefits of sharing. How does it make the giver feel? How does it make the receiver feel? Are there times when you should not share? When and why? Hot Potato Stand in a circle about arms length apart or sit in a circle. Begin some music of varying tempos and pass the potato around. When the music stops the person holding the potato must sit down or back out of the circle. Scavenger Hunt A play together activity that encourage sharing. Split the children into groups of 5 and create a set of 5 clues that they must find. Visual items work the best. The scavenger hunt is not complete until each one of the team members has gotten one clue. They have to share information and the clue sheet to win. Go Fish The simple card game makes giving your cards away fun and is a lesson in sharing. Share the Sound Stand in a circle and face the person to your right. The teacher begins by clapping or making a sound with her hands. The next student repeats the action all the way around the circle until it gets to the person beside the teacher. Now it is that student’s turn. The student will make a sound with their hand (clapping their leg, snapping, making a fast and slow clap…encourage creativity!) and pass the sound around the circle again. Each student get to take a turn pass the noise around the circle. © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities M&M Mosaic Subjects: Grades: Style: Social K–3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: Children will learn that sharing makes everyone feel good even when the thing to be shared is really tasty! Materials: 2 large bags of chocolate M&Ms (or any other treat like cereal fruit rings etc.) Paper Small Dixie bathroom cups or small paper plates. Lesson: Break the class up into small groups and give them each bathroom paper cup filled with colored treats like M&Ms. Ask the students to draw a very simple picture as a group and then create a mosaic using the treats. If they need more, they will need to ask the other teams to share their treats. When the pictures are complete offer a reward to each team. © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Sharing Poem NAME:________________________ DATE: ________________ DIRECTIONS: Create a sentence for each letter of the word SHARE to make a poem. S ______________________ H_______________________ A_______________________ R_______________________ E_______________________ Example: Sharing makes people Happy And Really Excited! Hints: Use a dictionary to look up some words that begin with each letter. © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Lessons & Activities Sharing Like Rainbow Fish Subjects: Grades: Style: Social K–3 Visual/Auditory/Experiential/Kinesthetic Concepts: Children will learn why sharing is important and how it benefits everyone. Materials: Colored gold fish crackers Fish print outs (below) Lesson: Begin by reading the book Rainbow Fish by Marcus Pfister. Talk about the events in the book that highlight sharing. Activity 1: 1. Start by passing out the bag of goldfish crackers 6 or 7 fish each but not more. 2. Using colored markers, make a pattern of 6 colors on the printable gold fish. (see below) Hang it up on the blackboard 3. Pass out blank fish to every child and instruct the children to put as many colored crackers on their fish to match the pattern. When they run out, they should start to share with each other. Trade the fish colors they do have for ones they need. 4. Once everyone has placed as many fish as they can on their papers they can color in the rest. Activity 2: Print the second fish for each student and ask them to write one word on each scale that they like to share or want someone to share with them. © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Rainbow Fun! Fish Name _______________ Date _______________ © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Name ______________________ Date _______________ Sharing Like Rainbow Fish Write the things you like to share and the things you want others to share with you on the fish’s scales. © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Name _________________ Date __________________ Some Things You Should Not Share Juice box Why shouldn’t share it? Hat you Comb and Brush Why shouldn’t share it? Why shouldn’t you share it? Fork and Spoon you Why shouldn’t you share it? _____________________ _____________________ Why shouldn’t you share it? Why shouldn’t you share it? Draw your own picture here © 2009 Mazz.com Draw your own picture here Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Additional Lessons and Activities for Your Child’s Learning Style Visual (seeing) – Make a sharing feels good poster. Each child will contribute a phrase of picture of how they share. Display the poster in the room for everyone to see as a reminder. Auditory (hearing) – Come up with a phrase for your classroom as a sharing slogan. Use it often to reward good behavior. (example “We show we care by learning to share.” ) Experiential (feeling, internalizing) – Encourage children to use sharing words with each other. Learn More! Books and Online Resources BOOKS The Rainbow Fish, by Pfister, Marcus Give me Half! by Murphy, Stuart A Handful of Seeds by Hughes, Monica We Share Everything! by Munsch, Robert Stone Soup by Jon J Muth The Last Chocolate Cookie by Rix, Jamie ONLINE RESOURCES Nine Tips For Encouraging Kids to Share http://www.marilynsuttle.com/articles/parenting/nineshare.pdf Marilyn Suttle looks at nine ways to help kids share and why it is so important for them to learn this skill. Teamwork Skill Games for Kids With Autism http://autistic-students.suite101.com/article.cfm/teamwork_skill_games_for_kids_with_autism Although the title indicates it is a game for kids with autism, these games encourage all kids to share and master the skill of taking turns. © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary What do these words mean? 1. Act 3 of these words in front of a mirror or your class 2. Write the word and think about what it means. 3. Draw a picture of yourself doing or feeling one of these words. Share/Share///////////////// Care/Care////////////////// Feel/Feel//////////////////// Turns/Turns////////////////// Ask/Ask///////////////////// Listen/Listen///////////////// //// //////////////////////// . . © 2009 Mazz.com Teaching Guide/Lesson Plan Vocabulary (Grades 1-3) Try the following activities with the vocabulary words to the right. 1-2: Ask your students to verbally speak each word and explain what it means. Use it in a sentence that makes sense to them. Look up each word in a dictionary, and write down its definition. Write each word in a sentence, or write a paragraph using the words. Vocabulary Share Feel Offer Turns Listen Ask Friend Nervous Share – _____________________________________________________________________________ Feel – _____________________________________________________________________________ Offer – _____________________________________________________________________________ Turns – _____________________________________________________________________________ Listen – _____________________________________________________________________________ Ask – _____________________________________________________________________________ Friend – _____________________________________________________________________________ Nervous _____________________________________________________________________________ © 2009 Mazz.com