The child will identify behaviours which are 'being a good friend' and those which are not, and give alternative behaviours.
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Early years skill: | not specified |
Early years typical range: | not specified |
P-scales/Curriculum skill: | PSHE and Citizenship |
P-scales/Curriculum level: | L1 |
TAP skill: | not specified |
TAP level: | not specified |
Pre/Nat. Curriculum Area: | not specified |
Pre/Nat. Curiculum Standard: | not specified |
Section: | Primary (5-11yrs) info |
Activity/strategy name and materials required | How to do the activity | Key principles for doing the activity and comments |
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Puppet role-play
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| This is a good activity for group work. You could give the figures to the child / children, and let them generate their own story. Stop the action when a key behaviour occurs and discuss if it was being a good friend and why. |
Drama
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Friendship Diary
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| If you have not already done this, you may want to brainstorm what sort of things a good friend will do. Make a poster that you can refer to for ideas. Talking about what sort of things a good friend would not do will provide a contrast - you may want to make two posters. This activity could also be carried out by playground supervisors, at the start and end of playtime. You could write their 'friendship mission' down on a card or post-it note to remind the child throughout the day. |
Friendship Awards
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| This works best in less structured sessions, e.g. in the playground. |