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Choosing Correct Present and Past Tense Verbs
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Paste this activity's link or code into your existing LMS (Google Classroom, Canvas, Teams, Schoology, Moodle, etc.).
Students can open and work on the activity right away, with no student login required.
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Information
Description
What It Is:
This is a feelings chart featuring illustrations of children displaying different emotions. The emotions listed include: Angry, Accomplished, Appreciative, Bored, Calm, Energetic, Excited, Frustrated, Happy, Hungry, Hurt, Intelligent, Jealous, Lazy, Lonely, Loving, Sad, Safe, Sleepy, and Thankful. Each emotion is paired with a cartoon-style drawing of a child expressing that feeling.
Grade Level Suitability:
Suitable for Preschool, Kindergarten, and early Elementary (Grades 1-2). The simple illustrations and basic emotion vocabulary make it appropriate for young children learning to identify and understand feelings.
Why Use It:
This chart helps children develop emotional literacy by visually associating words with corresponding facial expressions and body language. It supports social-emotional learning (SEL) by helping children recognize, name, and understand their own and others' feelings.
How to Use It:
Use the chart as a visual aid to discuss different emotions. Point to each picture and ask children to identify the feeling being shown. You can also use it to help children express how they are feeling at different times throughout the day. Ask questions like 'How are you feeling today?' and encourage them to point to the corresponding image.
Target Users:
Preschool teachers, kindergarten teachers, early elementary teachers, school counselors, parents, and caregivers who want to help children develop their emotional vocabulary and understanding of feelings.
This is a feelings chart featuring illustrations of children displaying different emotions. The emotions listed include: Angry, Accomplished, Appreciative, Bored, Calm, Energetic, Excited, Frustrated, Happy, Hungry, Hurt, Intelligent, Jealous, Lazy, Lonely, Loving, Sad, Safe, Sleepy, and Thankful. Each emotion is paired with a cartoon-style drawing of a child expressing that feeling.
Grade Level Suitability:
Suitable for Preschool, Kindergarten, and early Elementary (Grades 1-2). The simple illustrations and basic emotion vocabulary make it appropriate for young children learning to identify and understand feelings.
Why Use It:
This chart helps children develop emotional literacy by visually associating words with corresponding facial expressions and body language. It supports social-emotional learning (SEL) by helping children recognize, name, and understand their own and others' feelings.
How to Use It:
Use the chart as a visual aid to discuss different emotions. Point to each picture and ask children to identify the feeling being shown. You can also use it to help children express how they are feeling at different times throughout the day. Ask questions like 'How are you feeling today?' and encourage them to point to the corresponding image.
Target Users:
Preschool teachers, kindergarten teachers, early elementary teachers, school counselors, parents, and caregivers who want to help children develop their emotional vocabulary and understanding of feelings.




