Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
Documente Cultură
Identifying and describing their feelings is an important part of the way children develop social skills. This lesson
teaches your students how to identify feelings, and then elaborate on them by speaking and writing in complete
sentences.
Learning Objectives
Attachments
PDF
Elaborating on Feelings
Introduction (5 minutes)
Explain to students that the emotions they just identified are normal feelings that people experience all
the time. When we have feelings, it’s important to identify them and share them by communicating
calmly, clearly, and respectfully. When we do that, we have strong social skills, which is the way we
interact with others in a healthy and positive way. When we elaborate, we explain or describe in detail.
Offer students an anecdote where you recount an experience and had a feeling that you needed to talk
about. For example, tell students about a time when you were feeling a certain way about something that
happened, but someone close to you was unaware of how you felt. Plans were canceled that you were
really excited about, and this made you feel disappointed or let down.
Explain to students that even though you felt something inside, your face didn’t show it, you didn’t say
anything, and your loved one had no idea what you were feeling.
Tell students how important it is to communicate with others by following these two steps:
1. Identify the feeling. Ask yourself, What am I feeling right now?
Give each student four sticky notes on which to take notes during the read-aloud. Instruct them to write
four feelings that they hear described in the book, and to not worry about correct spelling.
Read a book about feelings, such as The Way I Feel by Janan Cain.
Stop to make text-to-self connections with the story, such as “I’ve also experienced that feeling when…”
Allow students to share connections to the book as well, if time allows.
Divide students into small groups and instruct them to review the sticky notes they filled out during the
read-aloud. Have the groups select four feelings that the main character experienced throughout the
story, then explain that they will write elaborative sentences about these emotions.
Write sentence frames on the board for students to follow as they write their elaborative sentences. (The
main character felt _____ when _____ because _____.)
Instruct students to elaborate on these feelings by writing a sentence, such as “The main character felt
embarrassed when she realized that everyone knew she made a mistake.”
Differentiation
Support:
Offer sentence frames for reluctant writers to support them as they elaborate. For example, “I felt _____
when _____ because _____.” And “_____ made me feel _____ because_____.”
Identify words that describe feelings (such as disappointed, jealous, or timid) that students may not
know, and provide visuals and context for when these feelings are often experienced.
Enrichment:
Challenge advanced students to choose three feelings and write a short story about a character who
experiences all three. Remind students to include a setting, problem, solution, and events in order.
Put students in groups to act out a story in which each character represents an emotion.
Technology Integration
Allow students participating in the enrichment activity to film their presentation and create a video on the
iMovie, Gravie, or Magisto Video Editor & Maker apps.
Tell students to turn to their elbow partner and recount an experience when they felt a strong emotion.
They can use some of the feelings the character had in the story, or choose a new emotion from the
Elaborating on Feelings worksheet.
Instruct students to review the sentences they wrote during independent practice. Tell them to draw a
star next to their favorite sentence.
Call on non-volunteers to read their chosen sentence to the class. Offer praise for the sentences they
shared, restating the part where elaboration occurred in the sentence.
Remind students that good social skills are important for maintaining positive relationships with people
we interact with. When we share our feelings and elaborate, we are allowing others to support us, teach
us, and to simply listen.