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  • 8.7

    Understanding emotions from facial expressions

    Why is this important?
    Facial expressions are the way we understand how others feel. They communicate essential information to the listener and are a fundamental part of social understanding. Being able to read and describe emotions in others helps in the development of emotional intelligence.

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    What to do
    • Collect together pictures from catalogues/magazines or photographs of faces showing emotions

    (e.g. a baby crying, a scared child, a happy clown, a surprised lady).
    • Put out the pictures and talk about the different emotions, e.g.
    ★ ‘Look, the girl is scared. What could she be scared of? Maybe a big dog or a ride at the fair?’
    • Demonstrate a ‘scared’ face and ask the child to copy.
    • Try this for all four emotions – ‘happy’, ‘sad’, ‘scared’, ‘surprised’.
    • Put out the four pictures and ask the child to point to:
    ★ ‘Who’s surprised?’
    ★ ‘Who’s happy?’
    • As you share books, talk about how people are feeling and why.

    "Emotions" - StoryBots

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