SEL

T-SEL Aligned Curriculum – ChalkWild
✏️ T-SEL Aligned Β· K–6 Curriculum

Proprietary & Unique SEL Curriculum
For Out-of-School Time

Co-developed with Changing Perspectives β€” trusted by 800+ schools in 48 states β€” these lessons give kids a joyful, creative way to understand and manage their emotions while building a kinder, more empathetic community.

πŸ“š Grades K–1 πŸ“— Grades 2–3 πŸ“˜ Grades 4–6 🎨 Art-Integrated 🏫 OST-Ready

🀝 Want to customize this curriculum for your district? Contact us to partner →

“I really like the variety of topics of the lessons. For those students who really process well through the artistic process, I can see this being a VERY valuable resource.”

Dr. Reid Volk β€” Coordinator of Educational Options, Ceres Unified School District

🌟 Soft Skills Students Build

Growth Mindset Resilience Goal Setting Empathy Communication Critical Thinking Problem-Solving Collaboration Creative Thinking Time Management

Browse Lessons by Grade Band

🀝
Relationship Skills
The Co-op Creature⬇ Download
Apology Reflection⬇ Download
The Sharing Square⬇ Download
Being Honest⬇ Download
Listening Ears⬇ Download
🎯
Responsible Decision Making
Decision Detectives⬇ Download
My Choice Flower⬇ Download
The HappySad Cloud Choice⬇ Download
Kindness Choices⬇ Download
Weather Choices⬇ Download
πŸͺž
Self Awareness
My Feeling Face⬇ Download
A Time I Felt Happy⬇ Download
These Are a Few of My Challenging Things⬇ Download
My Superpower!⬇ Download
Reflection of Who I Am⬇ Download
⚑
Self Management
My Calm-Down Cloud⬇ Download
My Focus Finder⬇ Download
My Goal Ladder⬇ Download
My Stop & Think Traffic Light⬇ Download
My Contribution to the Garden⬇ Download
🌍
Social Awareness
The Feeling Faces⬇ Download
My Friend’s Superpower⬇ Download
The Gratitude Garden⬇ Download
How Would You Feel⬇ Download
Round-Robin of Kindness⬇ Download
🀝
Relationship Skills
The Friendship Recipe⬇ Download
The I Feel Art Piece⬇ Download
The Problem-Solving Superhero⬇ Download
Group Connections⬇ Download
The Communication Rollercoaster⬇ Download
🎯
Responsible Decision Making
The Ripple Effect Drawing⬇ Download
Character Traits for Decision-Making⬇ Download
The Stoplight Decision Maker⬇ Download
Predicting the Outcome of a Decision⬇ Download
πŸͺž
Self Awareness
My Feelings Thermometer⬇ Download
My Treasure Chest of Values⬇ Download
My Superhero Strengths⬇ Download
My Body and My Feelings⬇ Download
Happiness List⬇ Download
⚑
Self Management
My Emotional Weather Report⬇ Download
The Behavior Thermometer⬇ Download
My Goal Map⬇ Download
My Brain’s Control Panel⬇ Download
My Resiliency Shield⬇ Download
🌍
Social Awareness
Story Perspective Switch⬇ Download
My Cultural Celebration⬇ Download
Empathy Comic Strip⬇ Download
Community Helper Team Art⬇ Download
Draw a Solution⬇ Download
🀝
Relationship Skills
Friendship Memories⬇ Download
The Communication Map⬇ Download
Good Friendship Logo⬇ Download
Conflict Resolution Comic Strips⬇ Download
Talk Box for Healthy Communication⬇ Download
🎯
Responsible Decision Making
Would You Rather⬇ Download
Curiosity Glasses⬇ Download
Defining Decision-Making Traits⬇ Download
The Responsible Role Model⬇ Download
πŸͺž
Self Awareness
The Emotions Wheel⬇ Download
Volumes of Values⬇ Download
My Strengths and Needs⬇ Download
Don’t Judge a Book by its Cover⬇ Download
Confidence is Contagious⬇ Download
⚑
Self Management
My Emotional EQ Meter⬇ Download
My Thought Bubble Challenge⬇ Download
My Goal-Setting Blueprint⬇ Download
My Self-Control Superpower⬇ Download
Healthy Habits⬇ Download
🌍
Social Awareness
Situational Superheroes⬇ Download
The Empathy Path⬇ Download
Community Systems Map⬇ Download
Kindness Kounts⬇ Download
Norms by Location⬇ Download
🌎 Special Unit

Hispanic Heritage Month
SEL + Art Enrichment Curriculum

9 lessons across Grades K–1, 2–3, and 4–5 β€” co-created with community educators. Zero-prep, word-for-word scripts included. Every student arrives with their CreateCalm Kit already in hand.

9Lessons
30Min Each
0Prep Needed
K–5Grades

πŸ’‘ Tips for K–1: Keep instructions one sentence at a time. Celebrate everything. Sharing at the end is optional for shy students.

1
Mi Familia / My Family
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Identity & Belonging

Goal: Students name family members and draw them on their backpack, connecting that family is part of who they are.

Gather0–5 min

Sit in a circle. Introduce familia. Ask who is in their family β€” model by raising your own hand.

Show How5–10 min

Draw a simple family tree on a backpack β€” trunk, branches, stick figures or names. Keep it simple to give kids permission to do the same.

Create Together10–23 min

Students draw their familia tree. Walk around and ask “Tell me who this is.” If parents are present, ask them to help add names.

23–30 min

Gallery moment β€” everyone holds up their backpack at once. Take 4–5 quick shares. Close: “Mi familia” β€” your family travels with you everywhere.

πŸ—£ Spanish Word: familia (fa-MI-lia)
2
Colores de Mi CorazΓ³n / Colors of My Heart
T-SEL: Self-Management Β· Expressing Emotions through Art

Goal: Students name emotions, match them to colors, and fill a heart drawing with their color choices β€” using art to express and calm big feelings.

Feelings Check-In0–6 min

Go around the circle β€” each student says one feeling word. Introduce: feliz, triste, emocionado, tranquilo, enojado.

Colors Match Feelings6–11 min

Ask what color happiness, anger, or calm might be. Connect to how Mexican and Guatemalan artists use bright colors to tell emotional stories.

Draw Your Heart11–24 min

Students draw the biggest heart they can, divide it into sections, and fill each with a color that matches a feeling. Don’t interpret β€” stay curious.

24–30 min

Pairs share: “This color is ___ because ___.” Close: when you have a big feeling, pick up a marker. Art is one way to take care of your heart.

πŸ—£ Spanish Words: feliz Β· triste Β· tranquilo Β· enojado
3
Manos Juntas / Hands Together
T-SEL: Relationship Skills Β· Connection & Belonging

Goal: Students trace each other’s hands on their backpack and draw what they do together with people they love β€” connecting that community makes us stronger.

What Do We Do Together?0–5 min

Ask 4–5 students what they do with family or friends. Introduce juntos β€” the value of being together in many Hispanic families.

Show How5–9 min

Trace your hand on a backpack. Fill it with tiny drawings of things you love. Demonstrate overlapping hands with a partner β€” this is the key visual.

Trace and Fill9–22 min

Students trace their hand, fill it with tiny drawings. If a parent is present, trace their hand overlapping. If no parent, pair with a classmate.

22–30 min

Everyone holds up their backpack β€” all those hands! Take 4–5 shares. End with everyone’s hand in the center: “Juntos!”

πŸ—£ Spanish Word: juntos (HOON-tos) = together

πŸ’‘ Tips for 2nd–3rd Grade: Students can handle 2–3 sentence instructions and enjoy the “why.” They may talk more than draw β€” drawing and talking at the same time is the goal.

4
Mis RaΓ­ces / My Roots
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Cultural Identity & Pride

Goal: Students identify at least one thing from their family’s culture and draw it on their backpack, connecting cultural roots to personal identity and pride.

Roots Conversation0–7 min

Use the tree metaphor β€” roots hold a tree up and feed it. Ask students where their family is from. 60-second pair share: one food, word, place, or tradition.

What Are Your Roots?7–12 min

Students brainstorm 3–5 roots: food, language, country, holiday, sport, song. Parents: name something from your culture you want your child to carry with pride.

Draw Your Roots12–25 min

Draw a tree β€” roots below (cultural symbols) and trunk/branches above (who you are now). Parents can add a root symbol with their child’s permission.

25–30 min

Gallery walk. Students ask each other 2–3 questions about what they see. Close: “RaΓ­ces” β€” your roots make you you, and they go with you everywhere.

πŸ—£ Spanish Word: raΓ­ces (rah-EE-ses) = roots
5
HΓ©roes de Mi Comunidad / Heroes Around Me
T-SEL: Social Awareness Β· Empathy & Recognizing Others’ Contributions

Goal: Students identify a personal or historical hero and draw them on their backpack, connecting heroism to everyday acts of courage.

What Is a Hero?0–7 min

Introduce Cesar Chavez, Dolores Huerta (Si se puede!), and Sonia Sotomayor. Then ask: who is a hero in YOUR life β€” not famous, but real?

Choose Your Hero7–12 min

Students choose their hero (historical or personal) and tell a partner one reason why. Parents: share a hero who influenced your family.

Draw Your Hero12–24 min

Draw the hero’s face, body, or symbols representing what they stand for. Write their name in English or Spanish. Early finishers: add a speech bubble.

24–30 min

Quick round: hero’s name + one word. Then silent reflection: what is one small, brave thing YOU could do this week to help someone? Si se puede.

πŸ—£ Spanish Phrase: Si se puede (see seh PWEH-deh) = Yes, we can!
6
Trabajando Juntos / Working Together
T-SEL: Relationship Skills Β· Collaboration & Communication

Goal: Student pairs create a collaborative drawing spanning two backpacks placed together β€” practicing communicating, compromising, and creating as a team.

Community Murals0–5 min

Introduce Latino neighborhood murals β€” no one person could make them alone. Today’s challenge: make a two-backpack mural where you have to agree.

Find a Partner & Plan5–12 min

Pairs choose a theme (neighborhood, dream for the future, Hispanic Heritage). Decide what goes left, right, and what connects in the middle first.

Create the Mural12–25 min

Backpacks side by side β€” draw at the same time. Name good collaboration out loud when you see it. Coach conflict gently: “What’s one option you both agree on?”

25–30 min

All pairs hold their backpacks up together. One sentence: what did you have to agree on? Close with the juntos hands-in-center ritual.

πŸ—£ Spanish Word: juntos (HOON-tos) = together

πŸ’‘ Tips for 4th–5th Grade: These students can handle identity, legacy, and cultural complexity β€” lean into it. Normalize drawing: “Abstract is fine. Your backpack is not being graded.”

7
Mi Voz, Mi Arte / My Voice, My Art
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Identity, Values & Agency

Goal: Students identify 2–3 personal values and design a visual “personal logo” on their backpack representing what they stand for.

Art as Voice0–7 min

Introduce Frida Kahlo and Chicano muralists β€” art as a form of voice. Ask: if your backpack could say one thing about who you are, what would it say? 30 seconds of silent thinking.

Values Inventory7–13 min

Read a list of values (family, justice, creativity, courage…). Students pick their top 3. Parent or peer adds one value they notice in the student that wasn’t chosen.

Design Your Symbol13–25 min

Create a personal logo β€” no words β€” representing 3 values. A flame, a bridge, waves. Don’t suggest what to draw: it must come from them.

25–30 min

Each student completes: “My art shows ___ because I believe ___.” Take 4–5 shares. Close: when you carry this backpack, you carry your voice.

πŸ—£ Spanish Phrase: Mi voz (mee vos) = My voice
8
Puentes / Bridges
T-SEL: Social Awareness Β· Perspective-Taking & Cross-Cultural Understanding

Goal: Students identify a “bridge” they live β€” between languages, cultures, or worlds β€” and draw it on their backpack, recognizing cross-cultural identity as a strength.

What Is a Bridge?0–7 min

Bridges connect two things that would otherwise be separated. Ask: what two worlds do YOU connect? Two languages? Family world vs. school world? Past and future?

Parent Bridge Stories7–12 min

Ask parents directly: what bridge have YOU crossed? Even one sentence is powerful. If no parents, students think of an adult in their life.

Draw Your Bridge12–24 min

Left side = one world. Right side = another. The bridge = YOU in the middle. Parent can add their symbol at one end, walking across with their child.

24–30 min

Each student: “My bridge connects ___ and ___.” Close: bridges are strong by design β€” built to hold tension from both sides. Living between worlds makes you more.

πŸ—£ Spanish Word: puentes (PWEH-tes) = bridges
⭐ Culminating Lesson
9
El Legado / The Legacy
T-SEL: Responsible Decision-Making Β· Values, Purpose & Future Orientation

Goal: Students reflect on the legacy they are already building and create a final drawing. Parents write a private note to their child delivered at the closing.

What Is a Legacy?0–7 min

Introduce Cesar Chavez, Dolores Huerta, Selena Quintanilla, Roberto Clemente. Ask: you are already building a legacy. What do you want it to say?

Parent Activity (parallel)Runs during drawing

Parents quietly write 2–3 sentences on an index card: the legacy they already see in their child β€” not what they hope for, but what they already see. Keep it secret until Phase 3.

Final Drawing7–22 min

Students draw their legacy β€” what they want to stand for and be remembered for. Soft music optional. Be a calm presence; narrate less than usual.

22–28 min

Parents hand their card to their child and read it aloud (or privately). Give 2 minutes of quiet β€” do not fill the silence. Then: hands in center. “Juntos.” End there.

πŸ—£ Spanish Word: el legado (el leh-GAH-doh) = the legacy
πŸ“ Note: If parents are not present, prepare a genuine card for each student yourself. This moment is equally powerful either way.
✊🏾 Special Unit

Black History Month
SEL + Art Enrichment Curriculum

9 lessons across Grades K–1, 2–3, and 4–5 β€” honest, joyful, and culturally grounded. Zero-prep, word-for-word scripts included. Every student arrives with their CreateCalm Kit already in hand.

9Lessons
30Min Each
0Prep Needed
K–5Grades

πŸ’‘ Tips for K–1: One sentence at a time. If a student is stuck, say: “Draw a circle. Now put a face on it. That is your person.” Celebrate everything. Sharing at the end is always optional.

1
I Am Somebody
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Identity & Belonging

Goal: Students draw themselves on their backpack and name at least one thing that makes them special, connecting personal identity to the idea that their story matters.

You Are Somebody0–5 min

Sit in a circle. Lead the affirmations: “I am somebody. I matter. My story is important.” Say them slowly, with energy β€” repeat if students are shy. Connect to Black History Month.

Show How5–10 min

Draw a simple self-portrait β€” big circle for a head, lines for body. Add tiny symbols for things that make you YOU (a spoon for cooking, a heart for family). Keep it deliberately simple.

Draw Yourself10–23 min

Students draw themselves big in the middle, then fill the space with at least 3 things that make them them. Parents: tell your child one specific thing that makes them extraordinary.

23–30 min

Gallery hold-up: everyone raises backpacks at once. Take 4–5 shares. Close: “Everywhere you carry this backpack, you carry your story. Your story matters.” Repeat: I am somebody.

πŸ“– Historical Connection: Ruby Bridges β€” walked into school at age 6 in 1960 knowing exactly who she was and where she belonged.
2
Brave Colors
T-SEL: Self-Management Β· Emotional Regulation through Art

Goal: Students connect emotions to colors and draw a “courage shield” on their backpack β€” practicing that bravery is not the absence of fear, but acting anyway.

Feelings Check-In0–6 min

Ask: have you ever had to do something scary? Introduce Rosa Parks β€” she was afraid when she sat in the front of that bus, and she did it anyway. Bravery is feeling scared and still moving forward.

Brave Color Map6–11 min

Ask: what color is scared? Brave? Proud? Nervous? Strong? Introduce the shield shape β€” it protects you. Your brave colors protect you.

Draw Your Shield11–24 min

Big shield on the backpack, divided into color sections for each feeling. Somewhere on the shield: draw one brave thing YOU have done β€” even something small. Parents: share a time you were scared and brave at once.

24–30 min

Pairs share: “One of my brave colors is ___ because ___.” Close: Rosa Parks had her shield. And now so do you β€” and it travels with you everywhere.

πŸ“– Historical Connection: Rosa Parks, 1955 β€” refused to give up her seat, sparking the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
3
We Make Each Other Strong
T-SEL: Relationship Skills Β· Connection & Belonging

Goal: Students trace hands with a partner and fill the overlapping space with what they do for each other β€” connecting community support to the history of collective action.

Nobody Does It Alone0–5 min

Ask: has anything important ever been done by just one person, totally alone? Harriet Tubman had the Underground Railroad. Dr. King had thousands of marchers. Community is everything.

Show How5–9 min

Trace your hand on a backpack, then a partner’s overlapping. Outside your hand = what you bring. Outside their hand = what they bring. The overlap = what you make together.

Trace and Fill9–22 min

Students trace each other’s hands overlapping on their own backpack. Fill each section with what each person brings. If no parent, pair with a classmate β€” works just as well.

22–30 min

Hold up backpacks β€” all those hands. Take 4–5 shares. Quote Harriet Tubman. End with everyone’s hand in the center: “Together.”

πŸ“– Historical Connection: Harriet Tubman β€” “I never ran my railroad off the track and I never lost a passenger.”

πŸ’‘ Tips for 2nd–3rd Grade: They can handle 2–3 sentence instructions and enjoy the “why.” If a student brings up racism or injustice, honor it: “That is real and it is wrong. Let us talk about what people did to fight back.” Then redirect to drawing.

4
Dreamers and Makers
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Creativity, Agency & Possibility

Goal: Students learn about Black inventors and artists, then draw their own invention or creation on their backpack β€” connecting imagination to identity and agency.

Imagination Changes Everything0–7 min

Introduce Garrett Morgan (traffic light), Mae C. Jemison (first Black woman in space), and Jean-Michel Basquiat (Brooklyn kid who became a world-famous artist). They all started with an idea.

What Would You Invent?7–12 min

60 seconds of silent thinking: if you could invent or create anything, what would it be? Pair-share. Parents: what did you dream of creating when you were young?

Draw Your Invention12–25 min

Draw the invention or artwork on the backpack. Label it. Draw who it helps and why. “This is YOUR idea β€” nobody else in the world has exactly this idea. That makes it valuable.”

25–30 min

Hold up backpacks. Each student: “What did you make, and what does it do?” Take 5–6 shares. Close: Garrett Morgan, Mae Jemison, and Basquiat all started with an idea just like yours.

πŸ“– Also mention: Katherine Johnson (NASA), Lewis Howard Latimer (lightbulb), Augusta Savage (sculptor), Charles Drew (blood banks).
5
Standing Up, Speaking Out
T-SEL: Social Awareness Β· Empathy, Justice & Civic Courage

Goal: Students learn how Black activists used voice, art, and action to stand up for justice β€” then draw a symbol of something they would stand up for on their backpack.

What Would You Stand Up For?0–7 min

Introduce John Lewis β€” marched across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in 1965, was beaten, and kept going. His words: “Get in good trouble, necessary trouble.” Ask: what would YOU get in good trouble for?

Identify Your Cause7–12 min

A cause is something you care about enough to take action for. 30 seconds of thinking, then pair-share. Parents: share a cause you care deeply about and why β€” this models that everyone can be someone who stands up.

Draw Your Symbol12–24 min

Not a word β€” a picture. A symbol that says what you stand for without writing. Around it, draw 2–3 things showing why this cause matters. Don’t redirect students away from difficult causes β€” validate them.

24–30 min

Fast round: symbol + one sentence about what you stand for. Close: John Lewis refused to sit down and be quiet. He changed America. Your voice and your cause matter β€” they’re on your backpack now.

πŸ“– Key Quote: John Lewis β€” “Get in good trouble, necessary trouble.”
6
We Create Together
T-SEL: Relationship Skills Β· Collaboration, Expression & Community

Goal: Student pairs create a collaborative drawing across two backpacks β€” inspired by the Harlem Renaissance tradition of communal art and expression.

The Harlem Renaissance0–6 min

Introduce the Harlem Renaissance β€” Langston Hughes (jazz poetry), Aaron Douglas (bold murals), Duke Ellington (music that made people feel things words couldn’t say). A burst of creativity that said: we are here, we are brilliant.

Find a Partner & Plan6–12 min

Pairs choose a theme: celebration, dream, neighborhood, or tribute. Plan what goes left, right, and what connects in the middle. The drawing must cross from one backpack to the other.

Create the Piece12–25 min

Backpacks side by side β€” draw at the same time. Name good collaboration out loud when you see it. When friction arises, coach: “What’s one small adjustment you both could make so the piece works together?”

25–30 min

All pairs hold their backpacks up together. What did you have to work out? One sentence. Close: the Harlem Renaissance was powered by hundreds of artists inspiring each other. Hands in: “Together.”

πŸ“– Historical Connection: Langston Hughes & Aaron Douglas β€” worked in the same community, inspired each other, showed up for each other.

πŸ’‘ Tips for 4th–5th Grade: These students can handle complexity β€” injustice, legacy, systemic change. If a student says “Black history is sad,” say: “Some of it is. And some of it is the most powerful story of perseverance and brilliance ever told. Let’s get into both.”

7
Freedom is a Practice
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Identity, Agency & Freedom

Goal: Students explore freedom β€” external and internal β€” and design a personal freedom symbol on their backpack reflecting what freedom means in their own life.

Two Kinds of Freedom0–8 min

Introduce Frederick Douglass (taught himself to read in secret β€” “learning was the pathway from slavery to freedom”) and James Baldwin (“Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced”). Ask: what does freedom mean to YOU right now?

Values That Connect to Freedom8–13 min

Freedom to speak honestly. To feel safe. To be exactly who you are. To dream big. Pick 2–3. Parents: share one freedom that took someone in your family real effort or sacrifice to have.

Design Your Freedom Symbol13–25 min

Design a symbol for YOUR freedom β€” open skies, open doors, roots growing into wings, a flame that cannot be put out. These are starting points. Make it yours. Soft music recommended.

25–30 min

Each student: “For me, freedom means ___.” Close: Frederick Douglass learned to read in secret. James Baldwin wrote the truth. You just named what freedom means to you. That is a practice.

πŸ“– Key Quotes: Frederick Douglass on learning to read Β· James Baldwin β€” “Nothing can be changed until it is faced.”
8
The Long Game
T-SEL: Social Awareness Β· Perseverance, Perspective-Taking & Systemic Thinking

Goal: Students explore how change happens across generations and draw a timeline of change on their backpack β€” connecting historical progress to their own role in the ongoing story.

Change Is Slow and It Is Real0–8 min

Walk through the timeline: Harriet Tubman (1849 escape) β†’ Civil War ends slavery (1865) β†’ Civil Rights Movement (1950s–60s) β†’ Obama elected (2008), 138 years after Black men first could vote. Ask: what would it take for YOU to work toward something you might not live to see?

Parent Timeline8–13 min

Ask parents directly: what has changed in YOUR lifetime that someone before you fought for? What do you have today that was not guaranteed when you were young? Even one sentence is powerful.

Draw Your Timeline13–25 min

A line across the backpack: left = something fought for (historical or family), middle = where we are now (what exists, what’s better, what’s still broken), right = where you hope things go. Put yourself somewhere on the line.

25–30 min

Each student: “I am the part of the story where ___.” Close: Harriet Tubman didn’t see the end of slavery. Dr. King didn’t see a Black president. They worked anyway. You are in the middle β€” which means what you do matters.

πŸ“– The arc: 1849 β†’ 1865 β†’ 1870 β†’ 1950s–60s β†’ 2008. Every point was someone’s whole life of work.
⭐ Culminating Lesson
9
What Will You Leave Behind?
T-SEL: Responsible Decision-Making Β· Legacy, Purpose & Contribution

Goal: Students create a final drawing about the legacy they are already building. Parents write a private note to their child. The lesson closes with a community ceremony.

What Is Legacy?0–7 min

Legacy is not what you leave when you die β€” it’s what you put into the world while you’re alive. Ruby Bridges was 6. Harriet Tubman was enslaved. Frederick Douglass couldn’t legally read. They started where they were, with what they had.

Parent Activity (parallel)Runs during drawing

Parents quietly write 2–3 sentences on an index card: What legacy do I already see in my child? Not what they hope for β€” what they SEE right now. Keep it secret until Phase 3. If no parents, facilitator writes a card for each student.

Final Drawing7–22 min

The last drawing for this curriculum: “What do I want to stand for?” Can connect to any prior lesson (identity, courage, community, invention, cause, freedom, timeline) or be entirely new. It just has to be true. Soft music. Quiet presence.

22–28 min

Parents hand the card to their child and read it aloud (or privately). Give 2 minutes of quiet β€” do not fill the silence. Then: everyone hands in the center. “Together.” End there. The silence after is part of the lesson.

πŸ“ Note: If a student becomes emotional during the letter reveal, stay nearby, say nothing, and let it be. If no parents are present, deliver facilitator-written cards with the same quiet care.
πŸ’œ Special Unit

Women’s History Month
SEL + Art Enrichment Curriculum

9 lessons across Grades K–1, 2–3, and 4–5 β€” honoring the courage, creativity, and leadership of women across every race, culture, and background. Zero-prep, word-for-word scripts included.

9Lessons
30Min Each
0Prep Needed
K–5Grades

πŸ’‘ Tips for K–1: Give one instruction at a time. Celebrate constantly. Sharing is optional β€” “You can show your backpack without talking if you want.” These lessons are for all students, all genders.

1
The Women Who Love Me
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Identity, Family & Belonging

Goal: Students name the women in their lives and draw them on their backpack, connecting that the women around us every day are part of history too.

Women All Around Us0–5 min

Sit in a circle. Ask: who is a woman in your life that you love? Take 4–5 answers, repeating each back warmly. “Those women β€” the ones you just named β€” they are part of history too.”

Show How5–10 min

Draw 2–3 simple figures and name them as you go. Students can draw faces, full bodies, or just circles with names. If a woman is present today, invite her to add herself to the backpack too.

Draw the Women in Your Life10–23 min

Students draw their women β€” giving them as much space as they deserve. Add color, patterns, or symbols representing something about each person. Parents: draw yourself on your child’s backpack with their help.

23–30 min

Hold up backpacks β€” look at all these amazing women. 4–5 shares: one person and one thing that makes her amazing. Close: “Your grandmas, your moms, your aunties have been doing brave and important things your whole life. They are history. Carry them with you.”

πŸ“– Tip: Widen the invitation for students without female family members: a teacher, neighbor, or coach who has been kind to you belongs on this backpack.
2
My Brave Colors
T-SEL: Self-Management Β· Emotional Courage & Expression through Art

Goal: Students connect emotions to colors, draw a bold design on their backpack, and connect the act of expressing feelings to the courage of women artists throughout history.

Brave Feelings0–6 min

Introduce Georgia O’Keeffe (giant flowers β€” “she painted large because she wanted people to really SEE them”) and Frida Kahlo (painted herself showing pain AND joy). “These women used color to be brave. Today, so will you.”

Brave Colors6–11 min

Ask: what color is YOUR bravest feeling? Courage might be red, joy yellow, calm blue, love pink or gold. Draw a big, bold design β€” fill it with the colors of YOUR feelings. Make it as big and brave as Georgia O’Keeffe’s flowers.

Draw Your Brave Colors11–24 min

Big shape on the backpack β€” a flower, heart, sun, burst, whatever feels right. Fill sections, each one a feeling color. Be bold. Take up space. “Georgia O’Keeffe would want you to.” Parents: draw your own brave colors on paper alongside your child.

24–30 min

Pairs share: “My brave color is ___ and it means ___ because ___.” Close: “Frida Kahlo knew β€” showing what is inside you, the real stuff, is one of the bravest things a person can do. Your backpack is showing the real you.”

πŸ“– Historical Connection: Georgia O’Keeffe & Frida Kahlo β€” women who used color and scale to make feelings impossible to ignore.
3
We Rise Together
T-SEL: Relationship Skills Β· Connection, Support & Community

Goal: Students trace hands with a partner and connect personal relationships to the long history of women supporting each other.

Women Helping Women0–5 min

Introduce Sojourner Truth β€” formerly enslaved woman who became one of the greatest speakers for both freedom and women’s rights, always traveling and speaking alongside other women. Ask: who shows up for YOU?

Show How5–9 min

Trace your hand on the backpack. Inside: tiny pictures of things you love to do with people who support you. Overlapping hands mean: we rise together.

Trace and Fill9–22 min

Trace your hand. Fill the inside with drawings of what you love to do with people in your corner. If someone is present, trace their hand overlapping yours. Inside their hand, draw something you do together.

22–30 min

Hold up backpacks β€” all those hands. “Every hand belongs to someone who shows up for someone else. That is what women’s history is made of. Not just the famous names β€” but millions of hands, rising together.” Hands in center: “We rise together!”

πŸ“– Historical Connection: Sojourner Truth β€” traveled with other women, spoke alongside other women, helped lift other women’s voices.

πŸ’‘ Tips for 2nd–3rd Grade: They enjoy the “why” behind activities. These lessons honor women of all backgrounds β€” when a woman from a specific culture comes up, acknowledge the extra barriers she faced and the extra courage it took.

4
She Paved the Way
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Identity, Aspiration & Connection to History

Goal: Students learn about women who broke barriers and connect their own aspirations to the doors those women opened. They draw their future self on their backpack.

Doors That Were Opened0–7 min

Introduce Malala Yousafzai (Nobel Peace Prize at 17 for girls’ education), Billie Jean King (fought for equal prize money in tennis β€” and proved women could compete), and Bessie Coleman (first Black woman in the world to earn a pilot’s license, 1921 β€” had to go to France to do it).

Your Future Self7–12 min

60 seconds of silent thinking: what does your future self look like? What are they doing, wearing, where are they standing? Parents: tell your child one thing you see in them that points toward their future.

Draw Your Future Self12–25 min

Draw your future self BIG. Around the figure, add symbols of what they do or stand for: stethoscope, paintbrush, microphone, gavel, rocket, trophy, book. You can write words too. Parents: add one symbol of something you believe they will achieve.

25–30 min

Gallery walk, then 3–4 shares: “What is your future self doing, and which woman paved the way for that?” Close: “Every single thing you described β€” someone fought for your right to dream it. She paved the way. Now you carry it forward.”

πŸ“– Historical Connections: Malala Yousafzai Β· Billie Jean King Β· Bessie Coleman β€” each one opened a door so someone else could walk through.
5
Women Who Changed Everything
T-SEL: Social Awareness Β· Empathy, Perspective-Taking & Recognizing Others’ Contributions

Goal: Students learn about diverse women changemakers, choose a hero (famous or personal), and draw them on their backpack β€” connecting historical courage to everyday acts of bravery.

Five Women Who Changed Everything0–8 min

Harriet Tubman (freed others 19 times on the Underground Railroad), Marie Curie (Nobel Prize twice β€” wasn’t officially allowed to attend university but went anyway), Dolores Huerta (coined SΓ­ se puede, still active in her 90s), Wangari Maathai (51 million trees planted in Africa, Nobel Peace Prize), Malala Yousafzai (youngest Nobel laureate ever).

Choose Your Hero8–13 min

30 seconds of thinking: who is YOUR hero β€” from today’s lesson or anyone, famous or personal. Pair-share. Parents: who is a woman who changed something for YOU?

Draw Your Hero13–25 min

Draw the hero β€” face, body, or symbols representing her. Add 2–3 symbols of what she stands for. Write her name. Early finishers: add a speech bubble with something your hero would say to YOU.

25–30 min

Fast round: hero’s name + one word. Close: “Malala said: One child, one teacher, one book, one pen can change the world. I add: one student with a backpack and a marker can change their world too. That student is you.”

πŸ“– Key Quote: Malala Yousafzai β€” “One child, one teacher, one book, one pen can change the world.”
6
Side by Side
T-SEL: Relationship Skills Β· Collaboration, Mutual Support & Co-Creation

Goal: Student pairs create a collaborative drawing spanning two backpacks β€” connected to the long history of women working together to make things that matter.

Women Who Built Together0–6 min

Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton worked side by side for 50+ years to win women the vote β€” neither lived to see it, but together they built the movement that made it inevitable. The NAACP women (Ida B. Wells, Mary Church Terrell) fought racism and sexism simultaneously, writing and organizing side by side.

Find a Partner & Plan6–12 min

Choose a theme: a woman discussed today, a place that represents strength, a shared dream, something that brings you both joy. Plan left, right, and the connecting middle first.

Create Side by Side12–25 min

Backpacks side by side β€” draw at the same time, keep talking. When you see good collaboration, name it: “I see you two checking in with each other. That is exactly what Anthony and Stanton did for 50 years.”

25–30 min

Hold up backpacks side by side. One sentence: what did you have to work out together? Close: “Side by side. That is how the world gets changed.” Hands in center: “Side by side!”

πŸ“– Historical Connection: Anthony & Stanton β€” 50 years side by side. Neither saw the 19th Amendment pass in 1920. They worked anyway.

πŸ’‘ Tips for 4th–5th Grade: These students are ready for gender equity, systemic barriers, intersectionality, and legacy. All genders benefit β€” frame it as: “Learning about women’s history makes all of us better at seeing who gets left out and what we can do about it.”

7
My Voice Is the Change
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Identity, Values, Agency & Voice

Goal: Students identify 2–3 personal values and design a visual symbol on their backpack, connecting their own voice to the tradition of women using art, writing, and action as change.

Women Who Used Their Voice0–8 min

Toni Morrison (Nobel Prize in Literature β€” “If you have some power, your job is to empower somebody else”), Malala (blogged under a fake name at age 11), Ruth Bader Ginsburg (wrote legal dissents saying “I dissent” to a future age), Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (TED talk translated to dozens of languages, turned into a book given to every 16-year-old in Sweden).

Values Inventory8–14 min

Read the values list (Justice, Compassion, Courage, Creativity, Truth, Family, Education, Equality, Joy, Community, Resilience, Kindness, Freedom, Excellence, Integrity). Pick top 3. Parent/peer adds one value they see in the student that wasn’t chosen.

Design Your Symbol14–25 min

Personal logo β€” no words β€” representing 3 values. A scale for justice, a flame for courage, an open book for education, a broken chain for freedom, a blooming flower for growth. Don’t suggest what to draw β€” it must come from them.

25–30 min

“My art shows ___ because I believe ___.” Take 4–5 shares. Close: “Toni Morrison said: If you have power, your job is to empower somebody else. Your backpack carries your power. Your values. Your voice. Use it.”

πŸ“– Key Quote: Toni Morrison β€” “If you have some power, then your job is to empower somebody else.”
8
Standing on Someone’s Shoulders
T-SEL: Social Awareness Β· Gratitude, Perspective-Taking & Recognizing Interconnection

Goal: Students identify a woman whose work or courage made their life possible and draw a symbol of that connection β€” connecting personal gratitude to historical awareness.

Whose Shoulders Are You Standing On?0–7 min

Title IX (1972) β€” Patsy Takemoto Mink fought for every girl who has ever played on a school sports team. The Violence Against Women Act (1994) β€” championed by advocates. The 19th Amendment (1920) β€” 72 years of marching. Ask: whose shoulders are YOU standing on?

Parent Stories7–12 min

Ask parents directly: whose shoulders did YOU stand on? What do you have today that was not guaranteed when you were young? Give 2–3 parents space to share. Even one sentence is powerful.

Draw the Connection12–24 min

Draw the connection between you and the woman who made your life more possible β€” you standing on shoulders, two figures connected across time, roots feeding a tree, a torch being passed, a door held open. Include a symbol for YOU and a symbol for HER. Connect them.

24–30 min

“I stand on the shoulders of ___ because ___.” Close: “Someday, someone will stand on YOUR shoulders. You are both the person being lifted and the person doing the lifting. That is history. That is you.”

πŸ“– Historical Connection: Patsy Takemoto Mink (Title IX) Β· The 19th Amendment (72 years in the making) Β· Violence Against Women Act.
⭐ Culminating Lesson
9
My Legacy
T-SEL: Responsible Decision-Making Β· Values, Purpose & Future Orientation

Goal: Students reflect on the legacy they are already building and create a final drawing. Parents write a private note about the legacy they see in their child. The lesson closes with a ceremony.

What Will Your Chapter Say?0–8 min

Women’s history is still being written and your generation will write the next chapters. Malala was 11 when she started writing. RBG started speaking up as a law student. Greta Thunberg started her climate strike at 15. None of them waited for permission. Audre Lorde: “When I dare to be powerful, to use my strength in the service of my vision, then it becomes less important whether I am afraid.”

Parent Activity (parallel)Runs during drawing

Parents write 2–3 sentences on an index card: the legacy they already see in their child β€” not what they hope for, but what they already see right now. Keep it secret until Phase 3. If no parents present, facilitator writes a genuine card for each student.

Final Drawing8–23 min

The last drawing for this curriculum: draw something representing your legacy, your vision, what you want to stand for. Can connect to any prior lesson or be completely new. “It does not have to be finished or perfect. It just has to be true.” Soft music. Calm presence.

23–28 min

Parents hand the card to their child and read aloud (or privately). 2 minutes of quiet β€” do not fill the silence. Then: hands in center. “We rise together.” End exactly there. “Go write your chapter.”

πŸ“ Note: Some students may carry socialization to shrink or be modest. Explicitly affirm bold, clear statements. There is no value too big to claim.
🌸 Special Unit

Asian Pacific American Heritage Month
SEL + Art Enrichment Curriculum

9 lessons celebrating the contributions, traditions, creativity, and resilience of Asian American and Pacific Islander communities β€” from East Asia and Southeast Asia to South Asia and the Pacific Islands. Zero-prep, word-for-word scripts included.

9Lessons
30Min Each
0Prep Needed
K–5Grades

πŸ’‘ Tips for K–1: Give one instruction at a time. AAPI is not one culture β€” celebrate specificity. If a student or parent is from an AAPI background, invite them to be the expert in the room.

1
My Family Tree
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Identity, Family & Belonging

Goal: Students name the people in their family and draw them on their backpack, connecting that family β€” across all cultures β€” is the root of who we are.

Family Circle0–5 min

In many Asian and Pacific Islander cultures, family includes grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins β€” even ancestors. Introduce kazoku (Japanese), pamilya (Tagalog), and ohana (Hawaiian). “Ohana means family. And it means no one gets left behind or forgotten.”

Show How5–10 min

Draw a simple tree β€” trunk, branches, a name or tiny face on each branch. Keep the demo deliberately simple. If a parent is here, ask them: who else should be on our tree? They might know names you forgot β€” grandparents, cousins, people from far away.

Draw Your Family Tree10–23 min

Students draw their family tree β€” big, taking up space. Write names, draw faces, or just circles with smiles. Parents: add a branch with your permission β€” someone from your family history you want them to know about.

23–30 min

Hold up backpacks β€” look at all these family trees. “Every single tree is different. Every family is worth celebrating.” Take 4–5 shares. Close: “Ohana means no one gets left behind. Your whole family is on this backpack now. Carry them wherever you go.”

πŸ—£ Cultural Words: kazoku (Japanese) Β· pamilya (Tagalog) Β· ohana (oh-HAH-nah, Hawaiian) = family, and no one gets left behind
2
My Feelings Garden
T-SEL: Self-Management Β· Emotional Regulation through Art & Nature

Goal: Students connect emotions to natural symbols and draw a feelings garden on their backpack β€” experiencing art and nature imagery as tools for calming and expressing big feelings.

Nature and Feelings0–6 min

In Japanese haiku poetry, nature images describe emotions β€” cherry blossoms falling = sweetness and sadness at once. In Pacific Islander traditions, the ocean describes emotions: calm waters for peace, big waves for excitement. Ask: how are you feeling right now β€” described in nature? “I feel like a stormy ocean. I feel like sunshine. I feel like a tiny seed just starting to grow.”

Build Your Garden6–11 min

Introduce nature-feeling symbols: sunflower for happiness, raindrop for sadness, thundercloud for anger, lotus for calm (grows in muddy water and blooms beautifully β€” stands for rising above hard things), palm tree for strength, wave for excitement, seed for hope.

Draw Your Garden11–24 min

Fill the backpack with plants and nature symbols representing feelings. Make it colorful, make it yours. Parents: draw your own feelings garden on paper β€” what is growing in YOUR garden today? Soft nature sounds or music if available.

24–30 min

Pairs share: “This plant is called ___ and it means ___ because ___.” Close: “Just like a real garden, your feelings are always changing. Some days more sunshine, some days more rain. And that is exactly how it should be.”

πŸ“– Cultural Connection: The lotus flower is sacred across Buddhist, Hindu, Vietnamese, and Thai traditions β€” growing in muddy water to bloom beautifully.
3
We Make It Together
T-SEL: Relationship Skills Β· Connection, Cooperation & Community

Goal: Students trace hands with a partner and draw pictures of things they do together β€” connecting personal relationships to the collective art traditions found across AAPI cultures.

Making Together0–5 min

In the Philippines, communities build homes together β€” bayanihan (everyone helps carry the load). In Japan and Korea, families gather to make dumplings, mochi, kimchi together. In Pacific Island cultures, weaving is done in circles with songs and stories. What is something you love to do WITH another person?

Show How5–9 min

Trace your hand on the backpack. Inside: tiny pictures of things you love to do with people you care about. Overlapping hands mean: we are in this together. Like bayanihan.

Trace and Fill9–22 min

Trace your hand. Fill the inside with tiny drawings of what you love to do with your people. If someone is present, trace their hand overlapping. Inside their hand, draw something you do together. Talk while you draw.

22–30 min

Hold up backpacks β€” all those hands. “Bayanihan. We carry each other. That is what those hands show.” Take 4–5 shares. Hands in center: “Bayanihan! Together!”

πŸ—£ Cultural Word: bayanihan (bah-yah-NEE-han) β€” Filipino tradition of community members helping each other carry the load

πŸ’‘ Tips for 2nd–3rd Grade: AAPI heritage is extremely diverse β€” avoid assuming shared backgrounds. Celebrate specificity and invite students to name their own community. If a student brings up discrimination or anti-Asian violence, validate fully.

4
My Roots, My Story
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Cultural Identity, Heritage & Pride

Goal: Students identify elements of their family heritage and draw them as roots on their backpack, connecting personal cultural identity to the rich diversity of AAPI communities.

Roots Conversation0–7 min

Use the tree and roots metaphor. AAPI Heritage Month celebrates roots from Japan, China, Korea, Vietnam, the Philippines, India, Cambodia, Samoa, Hawaii, Tonga, and dozens more. Ask: do you know where your family is from? 60-second pair share: one food, word, tradition, or place.

What Are Your Roots?7–12 min

Roots could be: food your family makes on special days, a language or words you know, a tradition or celebration, a story your grandparent tells, a value like respect, hard work, or education. 2-minute brainstorm. Parents: what is one thing from your culture you want your child to carry with pride?

Draw Your Roots12–25 min

Tree with roots underground (cultural symbols: foods, words, places, values) and branches above (YOU and your life today). “The deeper the roots, the taller the tree.” Parents: add one root symbol with your child’s permission.

25–30 min

Gallery walk β€” 60 seconds to see each other’s roots. Then 2–3 student questions to each other. “Look at how many different roots are in this room. Dozens of countries. Dozens of traditions. All of them beautiful. Your roots are not behind you β€” they are under you, holding you up every day.”

πŸ“– Tip: If AAPI students are present, give them extra affirmation and space to share their specific roots proudly.
5
Trailblazers
T-SEL: Social Awareness Β· Empathy, Perspective-Taking & Recognizing Others’ Contributions

Goal: Students learn about AAPI trailblazers, identify a hero (famous or personal), and draw them on their backpack β€” connecting courage and excellence to everyday heroism.

AAPI Trailblazers0–8 min

Yuri Kochiyama (interned during WWII, spent the rest of her life fighting for justice for all communities), Kamala Harris (first South Asian American, first woman VP), Patsy Takemoto Mink (first woman of color in Congress β€” Title IX is named after her), Sunisa Lee (Hmong American Olympic gold medalist, symbol of her community’s perseverance as refugees).

Choose Your Trailblazer8–13 min

30 seconds of thinking: who is YOUR trailblazer? Anyone β€” historical or personal β€” who went first, who faced something hard and kept going. Pair-share. Parents: who blazed a trail for YOU in your family or community?

Draw Your Trailblazer13–25 min

Draw the trailblazer β€” face, body, or symbols. Add 2–3 symbols: a gavel for justice, a gymnast’s ribbon for excellence, a door swinging open for breaking barriers. Write their name. Early finishers: add a speech bubble with something they’d say to you.

25–30 min

Fast round: trailblazer’s name + one word. Close: “Every person you named went first. They opened a door. What door could YOU open for someone else this week? You don’t have to be famous. You just have to go first. Trailblazers. That is you.”

πŸ“– Also mention: Chloe Kim (snowboarding), Bruce Lee, Michelle Yeoh, Norman Mineta, Yo-Yo Ma β€” each went first in their field.
6
Creating Together
T-SEL: Relationship Skills Β· Collaboration, Communication & Creative Cooperation

Goal: Student pairs create a collaborative drawing spanning two backpacks β€” connecting the experience of co-creation to collective art traditions across AAPI cultures.

Collective Art0–6 min

Indonesian/Malaysian batik (many hands β€” one draws, another waxes, another dyes β€” each contribution makes the whole beautiful). Pacific Islands tapa cloth (pounded bark, painted in groups with songs). Japanese kintsugi (broken pottery repaired with gold β€” the cracks become the beauty; what has been broken and repaired is more beautiful than what was never broken).

Find a Partner & Plan6–12 min

Choose a theme: an AAPI tradition, a natural scene (ocean, mountain, garden, sky), a dream for the future, something you both love. Plan left, right, and the connecting middle first β€” the middle must cross from one backpack to the other.

Create the Mural12–25 min

Backpacks side by side β€” draw at the same time, check in with each other. When you see good collaboration, name it: “I noticed you just checked in with your partner before you changed directions. That is real teamwork.”

25–30 min

Hold up backpacks together. One sentence: what did you have to work out? Close: “Like batik, like tapa cloth, like kintsugi β€” your collaboration made something more beautiful than one person could make alone.” Hands in center: “Together!”

πŸ“– Cultural Connections: Batik (Indonesia/Malaysia) Β· Tapa cloth (Pacific Islands) Β· Kintsugi (Japan) β€” beauty made through collective effort and repair.

πŸ’‘ Tips for 4th–5th Grade: These students can handle identity complexity, the model minority myth, legacy, and resilience. If a student brings up discrimination or immigration fear β€” validate it fully: “That is real. Thank you for naming it. Can you show that on your backpack?”

7
My Voice, My Art
T-SEL: Self-Awareness Β· Identity, Values, Agency & Voice

Goal: Students identify 2–3 personal values and design a visual symbol on their backpack β€” connecting their own creative voice to the tradition of AAPI artistic expression and identity.

AAPI Art as Identity and Voice0–8 min

Yayoi Kusama (Japanese artist who covered everything in polka dots to cope with anxiety β€” installations seen by millions, still making art in her 90s), Isamu Noguchi (Japanese American who didn’t belong fully in either country β€” responded with sculptures that speak to every human being), Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya (Thai American muralist during anti-Asian violence: “We belong here. We are not invisible”). 30 seconds of quiet thinking: what would your backpack say?

Values Inventory8–14 min

Read values list (Family, Respect, Excellence, Creativity, Perseverance, Joy, Education, Community, Compassion, Courage, Honor, Identity, Justice, Belonging, Balance). Pick top 3. Parent/peer adds one value they see in the student that wasn’t chosen.

Design Your Symbol14–25 min

Personal logo β€” no words β€” representing 3 values. A lotus for resilience (rising through difficulty), a crane for perseverance (folding 1000 paper cranes is said to grant a wish), a mountain for strength, a wave for adaptability. Don’t suggest what to draw β€” it must come from them.

25–30 min

“My art shows ___ because I believe ___.” Take 4–5 shares. Close: “Yayoi Kusama: art heals. Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya: we are here. Your backpack says you are here. Do not let anyone make you invisible.”

πŸ“– Key Reminder: Some AAPI students carry internalized pressure around perfectionism or not standing out. This lesson is an invitation to take up space. Affirm boldness explicitly.
8
Between Two Worlds
T-SEL: Social Awareness Β· Perspective-Taking, Empathy & Cross-Cultural Understanding

Goal: Students identify the bridge they live between cultures, generations, or identities and draw it on their backpack β€” connecting bicultural identity to the broader AAPI experience of navigating multiple worlds.

Between Two Worlds0–7 min

Many AAPI Americans live between two worlds β€” American AND Korean, Vietnamese, Filipino, Indian, Hawaiian, Samoan. Ocean Vuong (Vietnamese American refugee, writes in English about memories that happen in Vietnamese β€” “to honor what his family could not say out loud”). Ali Wong (made the parts that felt awkward and not-fitting into her art and her power). Ask: what bridge do YOU live?

Parent Bridge Stories7–12 min

Ask parents directly: what bridge have you crossed in your life? What two worlds have you had to navigate? Even one sentence is powerful. If no parents present, students think of an adult who has navigated different worlds.

Draw Your Bridge12–24 min

Left side: symbol of one world. Right side: symbol of another world. On the bridge: draw yourself β€” you are the connection. If a parent is here, they can draw their symbol at one end, showing they are crossing with you.

24–30 min

“My bridge connects ___ and ___.” Close: “Being between worlds is not a weakness β€” it is architecture. Bridges are engineered to hold tension from both sides without breaking. You carry two or more worlds at once. That means you can understand people others cannot. That is a gift.”

πŸ“– Key Idea: Bicultural identity β€” sometimes a superpower, sometimes hard. Both are true. Both belong on this backpack.
⭐ Culminating Lesson
9
My Legacy
T-SEL: Responsible Decision-Making Β· Values, Purpose & Future Orientation

Goal: Students reflect on the legacy they are already building and create a final drawing on their backpack. Parents write a private note about the legacy they see in their child. The lesson closes with a ceremony.

What Is a Legacy?0–8 min

Fred Korematsu (refused internment, fought to the Supreme Court β€” lost, then won decades later: his legacy is the U.S. government’s official apology to Japanese Americans). Dalip Singh Saund (first Asian American elected to Congress: “In America, what matters is what you do, not where you were born”). Ellison Onizuka (first Asian American in space, Challenger astronaut: “Every generation has the obligation to free men’s minds for a look at new worlds”).

Parent Activity (parallel)Runs during drawing

Parents quietly write 2–3 sentences: the legacy they already see in their child β€” not what they hope for, but what they already see right now. Keep it secret until Phase 3. If no parents present, facilitator writes a genuine card for each student.

Final Drawing8–23 min

Last drawing for this curriculum: draw your legacy, what you want to stand for, what you want to be remembered for. Can connect to any prior lesson (family tree, feelings garden, roots, trailblazer, mural, voice, bridge) or be completely new. “It just has to be true.” Soft music. Quiet presence.

23–28 min

Parents hand the card to their child and read aloud (or privately). 2 minutes of quiet β€” do not fill the silence. Then: hands in center. “Together.” End exactly there. “Go carry your story.”

πŸ“ Note: Ellison Onizuka’s quote is a powerful close: “Every generation has the obligation to free minds for a look at new worlds. You are the next generation. The world is waiting.”

πŸ“‹ LCAP & ELOP Funding Alignment

LCAP Priority 1 β€” Student Achievement
Documented 41.3% increase in student self-esteem from pilot program. Measurable T-SEL outcomes in every lesson.
LCAP Priority 5 β€” Student Engagement
High-engagement hands-on art increases school connectedness and after-school attendance motivation.
LCAP Priority 6 β€” School Climate
Family participation model directly strengthens school-home relationships in every lesson. Parent letter moment in the culminating lesson is a direct family engagement outcome.
ELOP β€” Arts Enrichment
Structured visual arts curriculum in every session. Students build a personal portfolio on their CreateCalm backpack.
ELOP β€” SEL & Student Wellness
All lessons explicitly address California T-SEL competencies with observable, measurable outcomes across all 5 domains.
ELOP β€” Supplemental Programming
Bolt-on design means ChalkWild supplements existing programs without duplicating the school day β€” satisfying the ELOP supplement requirement.
ELOP β€” Family Engagement
Parent and caregiver participation is a built-in structural component of every lesson β€” not optional or supplemental.
Culturally Responsive Programming
Units available for Hispanic Heritage Month, Black History Month, Women’s History Month, and AAPI Heritage Month β€” affirming, intersectional, and aligned to CA Ed Code 51204.5.

Ready to bring ChalkWild to your school?

Our CreateCalm Kit pairs these SEL lessons with the world’s first erasable art backpack β€” designed to boost self-esteem and spark creativity every day.

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