Lesson 233: Celebrating success

❤️ SOCIAL EMOTIONAL LEARNING (40 Lessons)🟠 E. Growing Together

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Objective

I can talk about success and how to celebrate it kindly. I can notice my own success, feel happy for others, and use gentle celebration routines.

Materials

Mini-lesson — What is success?

Success is when something goes well, or when we notice that we have grown, helped, or tried hard.

Different kinds of success

  • Trying something new, even if it feels a bit scary.
  • Practising a skill and getting a little better.
  • Helping a friend or being very kind.
  • Working well together in a team.

Success is not only about winning or being the best. It can be about effort, courage, and kindness too.

Celebrating success

  • We can celebrate with kind words like "Well done" or "You worked hard".
  • We can use simple actions like a high five, a clap, or a happy dance.
  • We can share our success with someone we trust.

Kind celebration vs. bragging

  • Kind celebration: "I am proud I kept trying."
  • Bragging: "I am better than you. You are not good."
  • Kind celebration makes everyone feel welcome. Bragging can make others feel small.

Being happy for others

  • We can feel glad when a friend does well.
  • We can say, "I am happy for you" or "You did it".
  • Everyone has different strengths and different days of success.

Simple success routines

  • End-of-day success share: each person names one small success.
  • Success jar: write successes on small slips and put them in a jar.
  • Success circle: sit together and clap once for each success.

Adults can say: "Let us notice our successes today. We can celebrate with kind words and gentle cheers."

Picture strip: "Success jar"

Guided Practice — Our success jar

You and an adult will make a simple success jar to notice and celebrate small wins together.

  1. Find a jar, box, or small container. If you do not have one, draw a big jar on a notebook page.
  2. Cut or tear small paper strips for "success slips".
  3. Together, think of 3 small successes from the last week (for example, "I tried a new food", "I helped clean up", "I practised reading").
  4. For each success, the adult helps the child write or draw one idea on a slip and put it into the jar (or draw it inside the drawn jar).
  5. Choose a simple celebration routine, such as clapping three times, a quiet cheer, or a gentle high five after each slip is added.
  6. Practise saying a sentence together like: "We are celebrating our success with kind words and simple cheers."
  7. Decide when you might open the jar in the future (for example, once a week) to read the slips and celebrate again.
Tracing Pad
Tracing snapshot for print

Practice — My success celebration map

Use this practice to help your child plan kind celebrations for their own success and other people's success.

  1. On a new page, draw a small child stick figure in the middle. Write or trace your child's name under the picture.
  2. Around the figure, draw three bubbles and label them: "My success", "Friend's success", and "Family success".
  3. In the My success bubble, help your child draw or write one recent success (for example, "I finished my reading", "I learned a new trick").
  4. In the Friend's success bubble, draw or write a success that belongs to a friend (for example, "My friend scored a goal").
  5. In the Family success bubble, draw or write a success that belongs to someone at home (for example, "We cleaned the room together").
  6. For each bubble, add one small picture or word for how to celebrate (for example, a star and "Well done", a high five, a smile, or a heart).
  7. Read the map together and practise saying sentences like: "I can celebrate my success kindly." and "I can celebrate other people's success too."

Quick Check — Celebrating success

Answer each question about success, effort, and kind celebration.

1) What is success?

Success can be about effort, kindness, and progress, not only winning.

2) Which is an example of a small success?

Trying something new is a kind of success.

3) What can you celebrate, not just winning?

We can celebrate effort and growth in many areas.

4) Which sentence is a kind way to celebrate your success?

Kind celebration notices your own effort without hurting others.

5) Your friend finishes a hard puzzle. What could you say?

We can celebrate other people's success with kind words.

6) Which action shows kind celebration?

Simple actions like clapping or a high five are kind ways to celebrate.

7) What is a success jar for?

A success jar helps you notice and remember small wins.

8) You tried your best in a game, but you did not win. What could you do?

You can still celebrate effort and good moments even if you do not win.

9) Who can you share your success with?

Sharing with trusted people helps success feel even more special.

10) What is one big goal of this lesson?

The goal is to enjoy success in healthy, gentle ways for you and others.

Assessment (parent/teacher)

Exit ticket (student)

Next time I will practise…

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