How to Be a Good Friend
Social Studies
Children will brainstorm and illustrate the dos and don'ts of friendship as a book or classroom display.
What You Need
- Chart paper
- Drawing paper
- Crayons, markers
What To Do
- Point out that good friends follow a set of rules on how to act and how not to act as friends, even if those rules aren't written down.
- Brainstorm with children what the dos and don'ts of a good friendship are. Here are some examples:
- Friends take turns in games.
- Friends stick up for each other.
- Friends cheer each other up when one is sad.
- Friends don't play mean tricks on each other.
- Friends don't steal from each other.
- Friends don't make fun of each other.
- Write the dos and don'ts on the chalkboard or on chart paper as children contribute examples.
- Invite children to each choose one rule to illustrate. Children can write the rule as a caption under the picture. (Don't pictures can illustrate the negative behavior with a diagonal line through it.)
- Encourage children to include details. For example, if two friends are playing a game, is it checkers, soccer, or a computer game?
- Display children's illustrations in the classroom under a heading such as How to Be a Good Friend or Dos and Don'ts of Friendship.
- You might also wish to collect children's illustrations in a class book.