This activity is about encouraging children to recognise their individual strengths, skills and qualities as well as the things they like about themselves. It is an opportunity for children to support one another by encouraging them to highlight what makes their classmates unique and special.
45 – 60 minutes
Begin by inviting the children to form a circle. Explain to the children that sometimes it can be hard to think of and say really nice things about ourselves – invite the children to share why that might be. Explain that it is important to have love for ourselves as not only does this keep us feeling happy, it can also help us show love for other people too. Explain that everyone is going to make themselves a big hug.
Working in pairs, ask the children to roll out their paper together. Ask one child to lie on top with their arms out, while the other child draws around the top half of their body (head, shoulders, chest and arms, hands). Repeat with the children swapping places.
Inside the outline of their own body, ask the children to draw a big heart. This should be big enough to fill almost all the space. Whilst the children do this, write the following questions on a whiteboard:
Ask the children to come up with as many responses as they can for each of these questions, helping each other when a person feels unsure. Once they have spent time chatting, encourage the children to write or draw their ideas in the heart. Ask if anyone would like to volunteer to share something they have written or drawn. Find out if anyone helped their partner identify positive things. Take time to offer each child something positive that you would like to make sure they have included.
Next, ask the children to add a smiley face to the hug and to decorate using paints, colouring pens or collage materials. Once dry, cut the hug out (see image). Fold the arms and hands into the body, creating a space where a child can slip into the hug. Encourage the children to give themselves their big hug and feel good about themselves.
Store the hugs in the child’s envelope which you might like the children to label and decorate. When you think the children would like a hug, you can bring out the envelopes or you might like to use for an individual child when they need it.
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