Honesty Lesson Unit | SEL Curriculum for K-2 Students

Teaching students basic life skills with social and emotional learning is so important. In this unit, students will work on being honest. It is part of the Responsible Decision Making SEL standard. This unique curriculum will take your students on an adventure to different towns where they will learn about social and emotional skills.

$5.00

This unit discusses honesty, dishonesty, rumors, and being honest at home, in school, and in the community. This unit comes with a story about the town, “Honesty”, scenarios or problems to solve, activities, a passport, stamps for the passport, a parent connect letter, and more. These primary lesson plans were created so there is little prep for the teacher. Simply project the Googles Slides and make your way through the lesson. The only prep you will have is copying the extension activities if you choose to use them. In fact, these would be perfect for a short morning meeting each day!

❤️READ MORE ABOUT THIS UNIT OVER AT MY BLOG❤️

Included in this Honesty Lesson Unit:

  • Lesson plans for the week
  • Projectable digital slides for 5 days of lessons
  • A story about the town your students will be visiting
  • Additional mini stories about the town.
  • Mini scenarios or problems to solve
  • Printable activities to extend the lesson
  • Slides with links to books and videos on YouTube
  • Parent Connect Letter
  • Passport and stamp for the specific skill
  • Tag for the skill if you rather use that instead of passport and stamp
  • Town Pledge
  • Question cards to use for the week
  • Matching Cards Activity

Standards:

Responsible Decision Making

E1: Develop, implement and model effective decision and critical thinking skills.

E2: Identify potential outcomes to make constructive decisions. (personal choices will impact the outcome of a situation)

E3: Consider the ethical and civic impact of decisions.

E4: Explore and approach new situations with an open mind and curiosity while recognizing that some outcomes are not certain or comfortable.


More from the SEL Curriculum:

©Megan Mitchell