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Expressing Emotions: Draw Feelings on a Face
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Paste this activity's link or code into your existing LMS (Google Classroom, Canvas, Teams, Schoology, Moodle, etc.).
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Description
What It Is:
This is a worksheet activity where students draw the correct facial expression to match the feeling listed next to the face. There are four feelings: Happy, Surprised, Scared, and Mad. Each feeling has a blank face next to it, dressed as a pirate. There is also a space for the student's name at the top.
Grade Level Suitability:
This worksheet is suitable for preschool and kindergarten. The task is simple and focuses on basic emotions, making it appropriate for young children learning to identify and express feelings.
Why Use It:
This worksheet helps children develop emotional literacy by connecting feelings with facial expressions. It encourages creativity through drawing and reinforces vocabulary related to emotions. It is a fun way to help kids understand and recognize emotions in themselves and others.
How to Use It:
First, have the student write their name on the line provided. Then, read each emotion aloud and have the student draw the corresponding facial expression on the blank face next to it. Encourage them to think about what their face looks like when they feel each emotion.
Target Users:
This worksheet is designed for preschool and kindergarten children, early learners, children with autism, and students who need support in developing emotional recognition skills.
This is a worksheet activity where students draw the correct facial expression to match the feeling listed next to the face. There are four feelings: Happy, Surprised, Scared, and Mad. Each feeling has a blank face next to it, dressed as a pirate. There is also a space for the student's name at the top.
Grade Level Suitability:
This worksheet is suitable for preschool and kindergarten. The task is simple and focuses on basic emotions, making it appropriate for young children learning to identify and express feelings.
Why Use It:
This worksheet helps children develop emotional literacy by connecting feelings with facial expressions. It encourages creativity through drawing and reinforces vocabulary related to emotions. It is a fun way to help kids understand and recognize emotions in themselves and others.
How to Use It:
First, have the student write their name on the line provided. Then, read each emotion aloud and have the student draw the corresponding facial expression on the blank face next to it. Encourage them to think about what their face looks like when they feel each emotion.
Target Users:
This worksheet is designed for preschool and kindergarten children, early learners, children with autism, and students who need support in developing emotional recognition skills.




