Especially for Younger Students: Responding with Emojis

(10 minutes, easy set-up)
Students will draw their own emojis in response to various situations.
Provide each student with three pieces of paper and a pen/pencil.

Ask: What is your favorite emoji and why? As students answer, point out that we love emojis because they help us convey reactions without having to type a lot of words. Distribute the paper and pens.

Explain that you are going to name six situations, and students will have ten seconds to draw their own emojis on the paper and hold it up. Share that emojis do not have to be a replica of typical ones used on the computer. Point out that students will use both the fronts and backs of all three sheets of paper to draw six emojis.

Read the following situations, one-by-one, allowing students ten seconds to draw their responses and hold them up:

When all situations have been read, drawn, and shared, point out that, in most cases, knowing how to react to something that happens around us is pretty easy. Explain that today, students will look at Mary’s resolute response to Gabriel’s unexpected message to her.