Teaching Children to Understand and Respond
to Feelings
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Daniela
and Karel,
Children often struggle not only with
understanding their feelings, but also
relating to other people’s feelings. These
skills are critical for personal well being
and building relationships. This article
includes steps for teaching children to
understand and manage their feelings as well
as identify and respond to other people’s
feelings. Another tool is to role play times when specific emotions surface. Use novel examples as well as recent experiences for the child. Discuss and write about different feelings in a feelings journal.
Use the journal to write about events and the
emotions, responses, and consequences the
events elicited. Encourage children to use words or write about their feelings. Establish a phrase the child can use to remove themselves from stressful or upsetting situations. The phrase gives children a way to politely excuse themselves, regain control, and then return to the situation.
Select a short phrase that can be used in a
variety of situations such as, “Excuse me. I
need a minute to think.”
When discussing a child’s own feelings,
incorporate the concept that peers and adults
have similar feelings in the same situation.
This helps children develop empathy. Read
stories where characters experience events that
are happy, sad, surprising, or frustrating.
Discuss why the characters felt the way they
did and what they said or did to indicate their
feelings.
Discuss how different people in the role play
feel, how their body language and words show
their feelings, and the best response for the
situation. Also discuss how the child would
feel if this happened to them and how they
would like other people to respond. This helps
children learn to empathize with other
people. |
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