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Do Something Nice Day: 8 Ways to Teach Kindness 

October 5 is "Do Something Nice Day" in 2014 and the day fits well into Bullying Prevention Month. When the day falls on a weekend, teachers can recognize the day on a later date. 

The Random Acts of Kindness Foundation is a movement with the aim to help everyone create a better world by "spreading awareness and increasing engagement in kind actions," according to its official website. 

EducationWorld has curated a list of five ways to teach and celebrate Do Something Nice Day. With these activities, crafts, books, and videos, students will be able to discover ways to spread kindness throughout their classroom, school, and day-to-day lives. 

  1. Kindness Lesson Ideas:  CASEL approved and highly effective, evidence-based Kindness in the Classroom® social emotional learning curriculum. By including a focus on equity, teacher self-care, and digital citizenship, we are excited to share a more engaging, relatable, and inclusive curriculum.. 
  2. How Full is Your Bucket? For Kids by Tom Rath: With this book, students can learn the benefits of being kind to others. Amazon says,"through the story of a little boy named Felix, this charming book explains to children how being kind not only helps others, it helps them, too."
  3. Kindness Counts Book: In this lesson plan, students get to create their own kindness book. Students will be asked to read one book from the suggested list and then fill out their own starter page about what they think about kindness and how they show kindness. Then, students are required to tell their own story. 
  4. Random Acts of Kindness Board: With this activity, students are given a sheet that looks like a bingo board, filled with kind activities including, "write a positive note to a classmate", "make a card for your favorite teacher," and "give a nice compliment." Students can check off or color in the box and track how many activities they can get done in one week. 
  5. The ABCs of Kindness: Students can think of their own Random Acts of Kindness ideas and perform them at the same time with this activity. Teachers will require students to guess their own letter, and then think of their own Random Act of Kindness using the letter as a word in the sentence. 
  6. Random Acts of Kindness by the Editors of Conari Press: "Random Acts of Kindness," according to Amazon, "encourages grace through the smallest gestures. The inspiration for the kindness movement, Random Acts of Kindness is an antidote for a weary world. Its true stories, thoughtful quotations, and suggestions for generosity inspire readers to live more compassionately."
  7. The foundation's video will allow students to see other people showing random acts of kindness, and then taking what they see into the real world. 

  1. Student Shout Outs: With a tissue box, paper, and a pencil, students can write their own anonymous positive statements about other students, whether it is thanking them for helping them out with an assignment, or being kind to others. Teachers can take time each week to read them out loud to the class. Students will be encouraged to put more positive statements out there when they see how happy their classmates were. 

Article by Kassondra Granata, EducationWorld Contributor