![]() As students move through the challenge, use morning meeting, individual check ins or a class meeting to share about the various acts of kindness that have been completed on their boards and how it’s impacted them and others.Also decide if you are going to have students fill in as many boxes as possible or just compete for a Bingo.Decide on the length of time students (and you!) will have to complete this board.Have students look at the acts of kindness in groups, maybe even have a collaboration time where they can add more acts of kindness that they can individually add in their free space.Hand the board out to students as homework, a challenge, or as a class goal.There are multiple ways you can use this tool in your classroom- just make sure you do what works for you and your students! How to use the Kindness Bingo Board: ![]() Kindness Bingo is a great way to allow your students to practice this characteristic in their own individual way. Teaching positive social character traits is important, but allowing our students to practice those traits in their individual homes or situations is where the magic happens. Social and emotional learning is here to stay in classrooms (FINALLY!) and it’s easy to get lost in how to implement it into the gazillion other things you have to implement on a daily basis. They have to apply those strategies or rules that we have taught to their own individual problems before fully comprehending the concept. Our students wouldn’t have a complete understanding of double-digit subtraction if they watch us do it on the board. What if we treat social and emotional learning like a math lesson?
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