Teaching children to celebrate the positive actions of others
Our children will develop physically, intellectually, socially and emotionally overtime. Teachers are very conscious to ensure that they model and teach children the value of affirming others when they succeed. For some children this is not a difficult awareness to develop but for other children it can take quite some time as they put their own interests ahead of others. Sport is a typical example of how some children feel frustrated if they do not win and struggle to enjoy success for other children.
Whilst to some degree, children will learn in various ways the value of affirming others, there is still the importance of teaching them the value of being generally happy for other children when they succeed, sometimes over themselves.
By teaching them to be happy for the other child, you are giving them wonderful tools to notice, appreciate and genuinely value others which is such a mature way to appreciate people.
By teaching them to be happy for the other child, you are giving them wonderful tools to notice, appreciate and genuinely value others which is such a mature way to appreciate people.
In schools there are various programs designed to not only focus on building resilience when things go wrong but also to recognise in themselves how mature they are to value the success of others.
Of course, in saying this, I appreciate that we are dealing after all with children and their emotions are slowing evolving but the home environment can be a profound learning space for respecting and valuing others. Parent's modelling can make such a difference.
Here are some examples upon which to reflect:
• When together as a family, discuss the success of some people you admire. Talk about the difference they make through their skills or gifts.
• Read stories of people you admire to the children.
• Actively acknowledge other children at sport venues etc. that do well.
When a child praises the success of another, tell them how proud you are that they can recognise the successes of another child.
“ How clever you are to notice John's running skills. Tell me more.”
Invite the family to write a genuine comment on each other. This is a positive statement about a strength you notice in that person. Talk about these comments when all together.
When working with children, especially those who felt poorly about their efforts, it was common practice to list all those children who spoke highly of them. You give them open sentence starters to talk positively about other children. Often you would start sentences with:
“I like Mary because..”
“John is friendly and..”
“Joshua has wonderful....”
Teachers would often use this tactic in a classroom, inviting all children to write one very happy comment about each other. It was amazing how it awakened an appreciation of others and lowered anxiety in the room. It also gave the child the strong message that finding the richness in each other was highly valued.
What these exercises are doing is skilling the child to notice the positive and to highlight it publicly.
It also touches on learning about your own limits.
Think about those people whom we like to gravitate around. No surprises that it is the people who see the value and admire the positive in people.
“People will forget what you said.
People will forget what you did.
But people will never forget how you made them feel.......”