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The Thinking About Your Emotions Game
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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.
You'll still be able to track student progress and results from your teacher account.
Information
Description
What It Is:
This is a worksheet for 'The Thinking About Your Emotions' game. It contains a grid of 30 different faces, each representing a different emotion, such as upset, satisfied, immersed, loving, affectionate, stressed, bored, pleased, thoughtful, shocked, dreamy, guilty, sick, silly, excited, embarrassed, shy, surprised, confused, smart, irritable, lonely, anxious, brave, disappointed, jealous, peaceful, tired, proud, worried, mad, happy, sad, and scared. The game involves pitching a penny onto the faces and discussing the last time you felt that emotion.
Grade Level Suitability:
This worksheet is suitable for late elementary (grades 3-5) through middle school (grades 6-8). The emotions are relatively simple to understand, and the activity promotes self-reflection and communication skills, which are beneficial for this age range.
Why Use It:
This worksheet helps children and adolescents develop emotional awareness and vocabulary. It encourages them to think about their feelings, share their experiences, and practice empathy by listening to others. It's a fun and engaging way to explore emotional intelligence.
How to Use It:
Place the worksheet on a flat surface. Take turns pitching a penny onto the faces. Identify the emotion the penny lands on and share a time you felt that way. If playing alone, pitch the penny and write down the last time you had each feeling on a separate page.
Target Users:
This worksheet is beneficial for elementary and middle school students, counselors, therapists, teachers, and parents who want to facilitate discussions about emotions and promote emotional literacy. It can be used in individual or group settings.
This is a worksheet for 'The Thinking About Your Emotions' game. It contains a grid of 30 different faces, each representing a different emotion, such as upset, satisfied, immersed, loving, affectionate, stressed, bored, pleased, thoughtful, shocked, dreamy, guilty, sick, silly, excited, embarrassed, shy, surprised, confused, smart, irritable, lonely, anxious, brave, disappointed, jealous, peaceful, tired, proud, worried, mad, happy, sad, and scared. The game involves pitching a penny onto the faces and discussing the last time you felt that emotion.
Grade Level Suitability:
This worksheet is suitable for late elementary (grades 3-5) through middle school (grades 6-8). The emotions are relatively simple to understand, and the activity promotes self-reflection and communication skills, which are beneficial for this age range.
Why Use It:
This worksheet helps children and adolescents develop emotional awareness and vocabulary. It encourages them to think about their feelings, share their experiences, and practice empathy by listening to others. It's a fun and engaging way to explore emotional intelligence.
How to Use It:
Place the worksheet on a flat surface. Take turns pitching a penny onto the faces. Identify the emotion the penny lands on and share a time you felt that way. If playing alone, pitch the penny and write down the last time you had each feeling on a separate page.
Target Users:
This worksheet is beneficial for elementary and middle school students, counselors, therapists, teachers, and parents who want to facilitate discussions about emotions and promote emotional literacy. It can be used in individual or group settings.




