Description
What It Is:
This “Good or Bad Choices” worksheet helps children identify positive and negative classroom behaviors through a fun coloring activity. Each picture represents a specific action, encouraging students to reflect on what it means to make good decisions and show kindness, responsibility, and respect at school.
Why Use It:
The worksheet promotes social-emotional learning by helping students understand the difference between right and wrong behaviors. It builds empathy, self-control, and awareness — essential foundations for positive classroom culture and character education.
How to Use It:
• Explain what “good choices” and “bad choices” mean with real-life examples.
• Ask students to color the good choices green and the bad choices red as directed.
• Discuss why each action is considered good or bad to encourage reflection and conversation.
• Use this as part of a classroom behavior lesson, morning meeting, or social-skills center.
• Follow it with the "Good or Bad Choices Sorting Activity" worksheet to deepen understanding through hands-on categorizing and comparison.
Grade Level Suitability:
Designed for Preschool to Grade 2.
• Preschool–Kindergarten: Introduces basic social concepts and self-awareness.
• Grades 1–2: Reinforces behavior reflection and decision-making through visuals.
Target Users:
Ideal for teachers, parents, and homeschool educators teaching character education, classroom management, or social-emotional development lessons in early elementary grades.
This “Good or Bad Choices” worksheet helps children identify positive and negative classroom behaviors through a fun coloring activity. Each picture represents a specific action, encouraging students to reflect on what it means to make good decisions and show kindness, responsibility, and respect at school.
Why Use It:
The worksheet promotes social-emotional learning by helping students understand the difference between right and wrong behaviors. It builds empathy, self-control, and awareness — essential foundations for positive classroom culture and character education.
How to Use It:
• Explain what “good choices” and “bad choices” mean with real-life examples.
• Ask students to color the good choices green and the bad choices red as directed.
• Discuss why each action is considered good or bad to encourage reflection and conversation.
• Use this as part of a classroom behavior lesson, morning meeting, or social-skills center.
• Follow it with the "Good or Bad Choices Sorting Activity" worksheet to deepen understanding through hands-on categorizing and comparison.
Grade Level Suitability:
Designed for Preschool to Grade 2.
• Preschool–Kindergarten: Introduces basic social concepts and self-awareness.
• Grades 1–2: Reinforces behavior reflection and decision-making through visuals.
Target Users:
Ideal for teachers, parents, and homeschool educators teaching character education, classroom management, or social-emotional development lessons in early elementary grades.
