Activity

Positive 4 Corners

Grades 3-5
Subjects: English Language Arts, Personal Wellness

*French resource included as attachment

Overview

Positive communication, through words and action, is an essential skill for daily living.  With emphasis on social-emotional well-being, this 45-minute lesson will give your learners the opportunity to learn, discuss, practice, and explore various methods of positive communication, rotating through 4 different stations spread around the corners in your room.

NB Curricular Connections

Personal Wellness 3-5

  • Strand: Relationships – Big Idea: Healthy Relationships
  • Strand: Mental Fitness – Big Idea: Positive Mental Health

English Language Arts 3-5

  • Strand: Interactions – Big Idea: Expression – Skill Descriptor: Describe and discuss thoughts, feelings, experiences, ideas, and opinions.
  • Strand: Reading – Big Idea: Reading Comprehension – Skill Descriptor: Connect and respond personally and critically to text.

What You’ll Need

  • Corner #1-4 signs (printed & posted – see attached PDF)
  • Breathing Cards for Corner #1 (printed – see attached PDF)
  • I – Messages handout (4-5 printed copies for center – see attached PDF)
  • Book – Drawn Together (by: Minh Le & Dan Santat)
  • Pencils
  • Mirrors (1 large one or 3-4 small ones)
  • Non-Verbal Charade Cards (printed and cut up – see attached PDF)
  • I Wish You Knew…Sheet (photocopied for each student – see attached PDF)
  • Chart Paper & Markers

Instructions

  1. Read Aloud – Drawn Together: Read the story together. Discuss:  Have you ever experienced challenges communicating with someone?  What is positive communication and how can we practice it?
  2. 4 CORNERS: Take the time to explain each of the 4 Corner Activities (that you have set up before hand) ensuring that any questions about them will be answered before going to them. Divide students up into small groups and feel free to set a timer (7-8 minutes per corner) to ensure that students get to all four.

Corner #1 – Strategies for Self-Regulation

In order to positively communicate with others, I need to be able to be calm, thinking clearly, and aware of my own mental and emotional state.  This corner provides examples of how to self-regulate and can be used at any time throughout our daily routines.  Please set up the posters (see attached) to print and post in this corner for students to try out.  Include the Chart and a pencil, so that students can vote on a favorite technique before moving on to the next station.

Corner #2 – Practicing I-messages

When we start our communication with the word “you”, the person we are talking to can feel defensive.  They may feel like you are being mean to them and that you are wrong.  When you begin with the word “I”, you are explaining your point of view.  The other person is more likely to listen to what you are saying without arguing back.  Using the mirrors, have students practice the I-messages and on a piece of chart paper provided (with markers), have students reflect on how changing you to I made them feel.

Corner #3 – Non-Verbal Communication

Act it Out!  Approximately 93% of effective communication is nonverbal, while spoken words account for only 7%.  Can your fellow students guess what is happening?  Use actions to try and express the message from the message cards.  Remember to stay quiet and communicate without using your words.

Corner #4 – Communicating Through Difficulty and Challenges

Have the Read Aloud – Drawn Together available to look (or hear or view) at this station.  For Students: Think of a person in your life that you are having difficulty communicating with in some way – someone with differing opinions, someone who doesn’t seem to listen to you, someone you wish you knew better, someone who speaks another language, etc. – complete a copy of “I Wish You Knew…” with this person in mind.  Draw, sketch, and write about what you wish they knew about you.  After writing down your wishes, reflect upon how you could best communicate this to them.  What is 1 simple action that you could do to try to communicate easier with them?

  1. NEXT STEPS: Gather together as a group and discuss each corner:

Corner 1 – review the chart and discuss the findings

Corner 2 – discuss how it felt to talk into the mirror and review the chart paper filled with student’s thoughts

Corner 3 – reflect on how quickly people could guess the gestures

Corner 4 – invite students to share their writings/drawings and their action plan (who feel comfortable doing so).

Re-visit our initial question: What is positive communication and how can we practice it? Have students add on to their original responses.

  1. CAREER MINDFULNESS: Positive communication skills are essential for our daily living but are also critical in the workforce.  Using the following job titles, briefly ask students to reflect on how positive communication is KEY to being successful in these career fields:
  • Carpenter, Dental Assistant, Marketing Consultant, Technical Support Advisor, Family Physician, Engineer, Social Worker, Wildlife Biologist, CEO, Video Game Developer

What groups of people do each of them need to communicate to?  What might be consequences of NOT using positive and effective communication skills in these job roles?

Extension Ideas

  • Create a Permanent Corner – for positive communication practice throughout the school year (have students add to it as they find what works best for them)
  • Have students find other self-regulation techniques and share with the class
  • Make a co-created chart of I-Messages and when students find themselves using one, have them put their name on the chart (add them up at the end of the year)
  • Create a short video of positive communication tips for school-wide news, assembly, or for another class
    Additional Read Aloud Suggestions

Reflection Activity

Please see the attached PDF for several choices on how you and your learners can reflect upon today’s activity.