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Teaching Kindness in the Classroom: Picture Books & Activities

Discover powerful picture books and engaging classroom activities to teach kindness and empathy to students. Perfect for K12 Kindness Month and year-round character education.

Colorful, playful illustration of "Niyoka's Notebook, Kindness Edition" showing a smiling orange character in a cap and a happy green heart on lined paper.

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Kindness isn’t just a value; it’s a skill that can be taught, practiced, and celebrated in classrooms. One of the most powerful ways to help students understand kindness is through stories and intentional activities woven into everyday instruction.

Kindness Picture Books That Spark Conversation

Help classroom community building with books for kids that focus on empathy and kind actions.

📚 “Have You Filled a Bucket Today?” by Carol McCloud

This classic helps students visualize kindness as “filling someone’s bucket.” After reading, encourage students to share bucket-filling examples they can try at school.

📚 “Try a Little Kindness” by Henry Cole

With cheerful illustrations and relatable examples, this book shows children how kindness can be expressed in everyday moments. Follow up by creating a classroom kindness chart.

📚 “Kindness is My Superpower” by Alicia Ortego

A student-friendly look at everyday acts of kindness. After reading, create a classroom “kindness superhero wall” where students post their real-life examples.

📚 “Be Kind” by Pat Zietlow Miller

This gentle story explores what it means to be kind in different situations, reminding students that small actions can make a big difference. Pair it with a reflection journal activity.

📚 “I Walk With Vanessa” by Kerascoët

A wordless picture book that powerfully shows how one act of kindness can inspire a whole community. Use it to spark discussions about courage, empathy, and standing up for others.

Classroom Activities That Put Kindness Into Action

These kindness activities for students help establish good habits and deepen character education.

  • Kindness Journals: Have students keep a simple notebook where they record acts of kindness they perform or witness. At the end of each week, reflect on patterns.
  • Compliment Chain: Give each student a strip of paper to write a kind note to a classmate. Link the strips together to build a kindness chain around the classroom. A chat chain or a Jamboard will bring this to life in an online setting.
  • Role-Play Scenarios: Create short skits in which students act out situations, like someone being left out of a game or someone dropping their supplies, and brainstorm kind responses.
  • Kindness Bingo: Make a bingo card with simple acts of kindness (e.g., hold the door, share a supply, invite someone to play). Over the week, students can work toward a class-wide bingo.
  • Gratitude Circles: Students should close the day by sharing one person they are grateful for and why. This anti-bullying activity will foster appreciation and recognition within the group.

Why These Lessons Matter

When kindness is modeled through books and practiced in classroom routines, it becomes part of a student’s identity. These small, intentional acts create ripples that shape not just classroom culture, but the broader communities our students touch.

As educators, weaving kindness into stories and lessons ensures that we are not just teaching academics; we are furthering social emotional learning and raising compassionate citizens.