Sample Lesson Plans

Sample Lesson Plans

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Teacher-ready curriculum: three kindergarten lessons, one middle school preparation lesson, and one full-day shelter field trip guide

Lesson 1: “Meeting Biscuit”

Grade: Kindergarten Duration: 30 minutes Type: First therapy dog visit Setting: Classroom (carpet area)

Lesson Overview

Students meet a certified therapy dog for the first time. They learn safe greeting behaviors, practice gentle touch, and begin to recognize that animals have feelings just like people do. This foundational lesson establishes routines and expectations for all future visits.

Materials Needed
  • Therapy dog + certified handler (confirm vaccination records on file)
  • Dog bed or blanket (dog's “safe space”)
  • Chart paper + marker (for class rules)
  • Picture book: How to Be a Good Creature by Sy Montgomery (or similar)
  • Stuffed dog for practice (one per table group)
  • “I Met a Therapy Dog!” certificate (one per student)
  • Hand sanitizer/wipes (one pump per student after interaction)
  • Camera (for documentation, per photo release)

Minute-by-Minute Facilitation

Minutes 0–5: Introduction (Dog NOT in room yet)
Setting Expectations
“Friends, today we have a very special visitor coming to our classroom! A gentle dog named Biscuit is going to visit us. Biscuit is a therapy dog — that means she has special training to be calm and kind around children. Before Biscuit comes in, we need to learn how to be safe and gentle with her. Can you show me your quiet, calm bodies?”

Create class rules on chart paper WITH students:

  • Ask students: “If you were a dog, what would scare you?” (loud voices, grabbing, running)
  • Guide to 3 rules: (1) Quiet voices (2) Gentle hands (3) Wait for your turn
  • Practice “gentle hands” on stuffed dogs at tables (30 seconds each)
Minutes 5–8: Dog Enters
First Greeting
“Here comes Biscuit! Let's show her our quiet, calm bodies. Watch — see how she looks around the room? She's checking to make sure it feels safe. Just like when YOU walk into a new place, you look around first. Let's give Biscuit a moment to get comfortable.”

Handler brings dog in on leash. Dog settles on blanket. Students observe from carpet (3–4 feet away). Teacher narrates dog's body language: “See her tail? It's wagging gently — that means she's happy to be here.”

Minutes 8–12: Learning Safe Touch
How to Pet Gently
“Before we pet Biscuit, let's learn the right way. First, we let her sniff our hand — that's like saying hello in dog language. Hold out your hand like this [demonstrate flat hand, palm down, below dog's chin level]. If Biscuit comes closer and sniffs, that means 'yes, you may pet me.' If she turns away, that means 'not right now' — and we respect that.”

Handler demonstrates. Teacher calls students one table group at a time (4–5 students). Each child:

  1. Approaches calmly
  2. Offers hand for sniff
  3. Pets gently on shoulder/back (2–3 strokes)
  4. Says “thank you, Biscuit”
  5. Returns to seat
Minutes 12–20: Small Group Interaction
Guided Interaction (Rotate Table Groups)

Each table group (4–5 students) gets 2 minutes of close interaction while other groups work on “draw Biscuit” activity at their desks. Handler guides gentle petting. Teacher circulates.

“While you're waiting for your turn, I want you to draw a picture of Biscuit. Look at her carefully — what color is she? How big are her ears? Is her tail long or short? Great artists observe carefully before they draw.”
Minutes 20–25: Group Discussion
Feelings Check-In
“Now that everyone has met Biscuit, let's talk about how it felt. Raise your hand if you felt happy when you petted Biscuit. [hands up] Did anyone feel a little nervous? [hands] That's okay! Being a little nervous around something new is completely normal. The brave thing is trying anyway. Now — do you think Biscuit has feelings too? What do you think she felt today?”

Guide discussion toward: animals have feelings just like us. They feel happy, scared, tired, excited. When we're gentle, we help them feel safe and happy.

Minutes 25–30: Closing & Certificate
Goodbye Ritual + Certificate
“Let's all wave goodbye to Biscuit and say 'thank you for visiting us!' [class waves]. Biscuit will come back next time to teach us more. Now, because you were all so gentle and respectful today, you each get a special certificate that says 'I Met a Therapy Dog!'”

Distribute certificates. Hand washing/sanitizer. Handler exits with dog.

Standards Alignment
  • CASEL SEL: Self-Awareness (identifying emotions), Social Awareness (recognizing others' feelings), Relationship Skills (communication, respect)
  • Colorado Academic Standards — Comprehensive Health: Standard 2.1 — Demonstrate healthy interpersonal communication skills
  • CO Reading, Writing, Communicating: Standard 1 — Oral expression (discussion participation)
  • Next Generation Science Standards: K-LS1-1 (observe and describe patterns of what animals need to survive)

Assessment Checklist

Student Behavior
Yes
Developing
Not Yet
Used gentle hands with the dog
Waited for turn patiently
Used quiet voice near animal
Identified at least one feeling the dog might have
Participated in group discussion

Dear Families,

Today your child participated in our first Compassion Education lesson! A certified therapy dog named Biscuit visited our classroom. Students learned how to greet a dog safely, practiced gentle touch, and discussed how animals have feelings just like people.

Ask your child: “What did you learn about how to say hello to a dog?” and “How do you think Biscuit felt when everyone was gentle?”

Our next visit will focus on reading dog body language. If you have questions about the program, please don't hesitate to reach out.

Warmly,
[Teacher Name]

Follow-Up Activities (Next 2–3 Days)
  • Students complete “My Visit with Biscuit” drawing and dictate one sentence about the experience
  • Add student drawings to a class book: “Our Therapy Dog Friend”
  • Morning meeting: practice gentle voice/hands check-in (“How can we be gentle today?”)
  • Read aloud: A Sick Day for Amos McGee by Philip Stead (connection: caring for animals)

Lesson 2: “How Dogs Talk Without Words”

Grade: Kindergarten Duration: 30 minutes Type: Body language literacy Setting: Classroom (carpet area)

Lesson Overview

Students learn to read canine body language as a gateway to understanding non-verbal communication in all relationships. They practice identifying emotions in dogs AND people through physical cues, building empathy by recognizing that feelings are communicated through more than words.

Materials Needed
  • Therapy dog + certified handler
  • Large printed photos (11x17): happy dog, scared dog, playful dog, tired dog, nervous dog (5 images)
  • “Dog Feelings” matching cards (set of 20: 10 dog photos + 10 emotion words)
  • Chart paper with body outline of a dog (pre-drawn)
  • Crayons/markers for student activity
  • “Dog Body Language” take-home handout (one per student)

Minute-by-Minute Facilitation

Minutes 0–3: Review & Warm-Up
Recall Last Visit
“Who remembers our friend Biscuit? What were our three rules? [quiet voices, gentle hands, wait for turn] Great memory! Today Biscuit is back, and she's going to help us learn something amazing — how dogs talk to us WITHOUT using any words at all!”
Minutes 3–10: Photo Activity
Reading Dog Faces & Bodies
“I'm going to show you pictures of dogs, and I want you to be detectives. Look very carefully at the dog's face and body and tell me: how is this dog FEELING?”

Show each photo. Guide observations:

  • Happy dog: “What do you see? Mouth open, tongue out, relaxed ears, wagging tail. This dog is saying 'I feel great!'”
  • Scared dog: “Look at this dog's tail — tucked between legs. Ears flat. Body low. This dog is saying 'I'm frightened.'”
  • Playful dog: “Front legs down, bottom up — that's called a 'play bow!' This dog is saying 'Let's play!'”
  • Tired dog: “Slow blinks, yawning, lying down. This dog is saying 'I need rest.'”
  • Nervous dog: “Licking lips, looking away, body stiff. This dog is saying 'I'm uncomfortable. Please give me space.'”
Minutes 10–15: Live Observation
Watch Biscuit (Live)
“Now let's watch Biscuit and see if we can read HER feelings. Remember, we're detectives! Look at her tail... her ears... her mouth... What is Biscuit telling us right now?”

Handler moves dog through several states: resting (tired), greeting teacher (happy), hearing a noise (alert). Students identify emotions in real-time.

Minutes 15–20: People Connection
We Talk Without Words Too!
“Guess what? People also talk without words! When your friend is sad, how do you know even if they don't SAY anything? [shoulders down, frowning, quiet] When your friend is excited? [jumping, big eyes, big smile] We read each other's bodies just like we read Biscuit's body. That's called empathy — noticing how someone else feels.”

Quick game: Teacher acts out an emotion silently. Students guess. Do 4–5 rounds. Then students pair up and try with each other.

Minutes 20–25: Interaction with New Skill
Practice Reading Biscuit

Each table group approaches Biscuit. Before petting, each child must say what Biscuit is feeling based on body language: “Biscuit looks happy because her tail is wagging, so it's okay to pet her.” Handler confirms or gently corrects.

Minutes 25–30: Closing
Reflection & Take-Home
“Today you became body language experts! You can now read how a dog feels AND how people feel, just by looking carefully. This week, I want you to be a feelings detective at home. Watch your family, your pets, your friends — see if you can tell how they feel without them saying a word.”

Distribute “Dog Body Language” take-home handout. Wave goodbye to Biscuit.

Standards Alignment
  • CASEL SEL: Social Awareness (perspective-taking, recognizing others' emotions), Self-Awareness (identifying emotions in self)
  • CO Comprehensive Health: Standard 2 — Analyze interpersonal communication and demonstrate healthy strategies
  • CO Science: Observe and describe animal behavior patterns
  • CO Visual Arts: Standard 1 — Observe and learn to comprehend (visual literacy)

Assessment Checklist

Student Behavior
Yes
Developing
Not Yet
Correctly identified at least 3/5 dog emotions from photos
Named a body cue to support their identification
Connected dog body language to human body language
Read Biscuit's real-time state before interacting
Used the word “empathy” or described the concept

Dear Families,

Today in Compassion Education, your child learned to read dog body language — and then connected it to reading HUMAN emotions too! We practiced identifying happy, scared, playful, tired, and nervous dogs, then discussed how we notice the same feelings in people around us.

Ask your child: “How can you tell if a dog is happy?” and “How can you tell if a friend is sad without them saying anything?”

Home challenge: Be a “feelings detective” this week — notice body language in family members and pets!

Warmly,
[Teacher Name]

Follow-Up Activities
  • Feelings detective journal: students draw one observation per day of body language they noticed
  • Create a classroom poster: “Dog Feelings vs. People Feelings” (side-by-side comparisons)
  • Partner activity: take turns showing emotions silently, partner guesses
  • Read aloud: The Invisible Boy by Trudy Ludwig (noticing quiet feelings in others)

Lesson 3: “Taking Care of Someone”

Grade: Kindergarten Duration: 30 minutes Type: Responsibility & caregiving Setting: Classroom (carpet + tables)

Lesson Overview

Students explore what it means to be responsible for another living being. By comparing their own daily needs to a dog's daily needs, they discover that caring for others requires attention, consistency, and kindness — foundational responsibility skills.

Materials Needed
  • Therapy dog + certified handler
  • Dog care items (real): food bowl, water bowl, leash, brush, toy, bed
  • Chart paper: “What I Need” vs. “What Biscuit Needs”
  • “My Care Plan” worksheet (one per student): simple schedule grid
  • Crayons/pencils
  • Picture book: Harry the Dirty Dog by Gene Zion (or similar)

Minute-by-Minute Facilitation

Minutes 0–5: My Needs
What Do YOU Need Every Day?
“Before Biscuit comes in today, I have a question: what do YOU need every single day to be healthy and happy? Think about your morning — what happens?”

Chart student responses: food, water, sleep, exercise/play, love/hugs, bath/clean clothes, doctor visits. Write on left side of chart paper.

Minutes 5–10: Biscuit's Needs (Dog Enters)
What Does Biscuit Need?
“Now let's think about Biscuit. She can't go to the fridge and make herself breakfast, can she? She can't turn on the bathtub! Someone has to take care of her. What does Biscuit need every day?”

As students name needs, handler shows real items: food bowl, water, leash (walks = exercise), brush (grooming), toy (play), bed (sleep). Write on right side of chart. Draw lines connecting matching needs (food ↔ food, exercise ↔ walks, etc.).

“Look at that! Biscuit needs almost the same things you do! The difference is — Biscuit can't get them herself. She depends on her person. That's called RESPONSIBILITY — when someone is counting on you.”
Minutes 10–15: Demonstration
Watch a Care Routine

Handler demonstrates a mini-care routine with Biscuit while narrating: checking water, gentle brushing (Biscuit enjoys this), a short walk around the room, offering a treat. Students observe the gentleness and attention required.

“Notice how [Handler] pays attention to Biscuit the whole time. Being responsible means paying attention — noticing when someone needs something. Does Biscuit look like she enjoys being brushed? How can you tell?”
Minutes 15–22: Student Activity
My Care Plan

Students complete “My Care Plan” worksheet: a simple daily schedule showing when a dog would need care (morning: food + water + walk; afternoon: play + water; evening: dinner + walk + bed). They draw pictures in each time box.

While working, 2–3 students at a time can brush Biscuit gently (handler supervises).

Minutes 22–27: Connection to People
Who Takes Care of You? Who Do YOU Take Care Of?
“Who takes care of YOU every day? [parents, teachers, grandparents] And here's the big question — is there anyone or anything that YOU take care of? [younger sibling, pet, stuffed animal, plant] Even small acts of caring count! Filling the dog's water bowl. Being gentle with a baby sister. Watering a plant. That's responsibility — and you're already doing it!”
Minutes 27–30: Closing
Responsibility Promise
“Today we learned that being responsible means paying attention to what someone needs and doing it even when no one reminds you. This week, I challenge you to do ONE caring thing each day without being asked. It can be for a pet, a person, or even a plant. Can you accept that challenge? [Thumbs up!]”

Wave goodbye to Biscuit. Distribute care plan worksheets to take home.

Standards Alignment
  • CASEL SEL: Responsible Decision-Making (identifying responsibilities), Relationship Skills (caring for others)
  • CO Comprehensive Health: Standard 4 — Demonstrate responsible personal and social behavior
  • CO Science K-LS1: What do animals need to survive?
  • CO Math: Sequencing (daily schedule/routine ordering)

Assessment Checklist

Student Behavior
Yes
Developing
Not Yet
Named at least 3 things a dog needs daily
Connected dog needs to their own needs
Completed care plan with logical daily sequence
Described what “responsibility” means in own words
Identified one way they already care for others

Dear Families,

Today your child explored responsibility by comparing their daily needs to a dog's daily needs. They created a “Care Plan” showing when a dog needs food, water, walks, and rest — and discussed how caring for another living being builds character.

Ask your child: “What does Biscuit need that she can't get by herself?” and “What's one caring thing you can do this week without being asked?”

Home challenge: One caring act per day this week — no reminders needed!

Warmly,
[Teacher Name]

Follow-Up Activities
  • Responsibility tracker: simple chart where students put a sticker each day they do a caring act unprompted
  • Class pet care (if applicable): connect to classroom plant/fish/etc. care routine
  • Read aloud: A Chair for My Mother by Vera B. Williams (caring for family)
  • Writing: “I am responsible when I...” sentence completion with illustration

Lesson 4: “Preparing for Our Shelter Visit”

Grade: Middle School (6–8) Duration: 45 minutes Type: Pre-trip preparation Setting: Classroom

Lesson Overview

Students prepare intellectually and emotionally for a shelter visit. They research animal welfare issues, develop observation questions, discuss the emotional complexity of shelters (joy and sadness coexist), and set personal learning goals. This lesson ensures students arrive at the shelter as informed, purposeful visitors — not passive tourists.

Materials Needed
  • Projector + slides (shelter statistics, photos of shelter environment)
  • “Shelter Visit Journal” (printed booklet, one per student): observation pages, reflection prompts, sketch space
  • Whiteboard/markers
  • Printed handout: “Shelter Etiquette & Safety” (one per student)
  • Index cards (for question brainstorm)
  • Permission slips collected (already sent home previous week)

Minute-by-Minute Facilitation

Minutes 0–5: Hook
The Numbers
“I want to start with a number: 6.3 million. That's how many companion animals enter U.S. shelters every year. About 4.1 million are adopted. That leaves over 2 million who aren't. Some are transferred to rescue groups. Some are reunited with owners. And some — about 920,000 — are euthanized. These are real lives. Next week, we're going to meet some of them. Today we prepare.”

Brief discussion: What surprised you about those numbers? What questions do they raise?

Minutes 5–15: Understanding Shelters
Why Shelters Exist & How They Work

Slideshow covering:

  • Types of shelters: open-admission (must accept all) vs. limited-admission (can be selective)
  • How animals arrive: strays, owner surrenders, cruelty cases, transfers
  • What happens inside: intake, medical evaluation, behavioral assessment, housing, adoption process
  • Staff and volunteers: who works there, what their jobs look like, emotional toll
  • The local shelter we'll visit: name, size, philosophy, adoption rates
“Shelters are complicated places. You'll see animals who are scared because they lost their home. You'll see animals who are thriving and ready for adoption. You might feel sad AND hopeful at the same time. That's normal. The purpose of our visit isn't to feel bad — it's to UNDERSTAND, so we can think about solutions.”
Minutes 15–25: Question Development
Building Our Inquiry Questions
“Good researchers don't just show up — they arrive with questions. I want you to develop 2–3 questions you genuinely want answered during our visit. These can be for shelter staff, about the animals, or about how the system works.”

Students brainstorm on index cards individually (3 min), then share at tables (3 min), then select best questions to share with class (4 min). Teacher captures themes on whiteboard.

Sample student questions: “How do you decide which animals are adoptable?” “What happens if an animal is here for a long time?” “How do you help scared animals feel safe?” “What can people our age actually do to help?”

Minutes 25–35: Emotional Preparation
Managing Complex Emotions
“Let's talk about something real. Some of you might feel overwhelmed at the shelter. You might want to adopt every animal. You might feel angry at people who surrendered their pets. You might feel sad seeing animals in kennels. All of those feelings are valid. Here's what I want you to know: feeling hard emotions doesn't mean you're weak. It means you have empathy. And empathy is the first step toward action.”

Discuss coping strategies: take a breath, step back if needed, write in journal, ask an adult for support. Emphasize: it's okay to feel, AND we channel feelings into understanding and eventually into action.

Minutes 35–40: Logistics & Expectations
Safety, Etiquette, Roles

Distribute “Shelter Etiquette” handout. Cover:

  • Quiet voices (animals are already stressed; loud noises make it worse)
  • Don't put fingers in kennels unless staff says it's okay
  • Follow all staff instructions immediately
  • Stay with your assigned group at all times
  • Phones away unless using for journal notes (no flash photography)
  • Dress code: closed-toe shoes, comfortable clothes you don't mind getting dirty

Assign roles: 2 students will interview staff (prepared questions), 2 will sketch the facility layout, all will complete observation journals.

Minutes 40–45: Personal Goal Setting
My Learning Goal
“Before we leave today, I want you to write one personal learning goal in the front of your Shelter Visit Journal. Complete this sentence: 'By the end of our shelter visit, I want to understand ___.' This is YOUR purpose for the trip. Something you genuinely want to figure out.”

Students write goals. Collect journals (bring on field trip day). Remind: permission slips due tomorrow if not already submitted.

Standards Alignment
  • CASEL SEL: Self-Awareness (emotional preparedness), Social Awareness (systemic thinking), Responsible Decision-Making (inquiry-based learning)
  • CO Social Studies: Standard 4 — Civic engagement and personal responsibility
  • CO Reading, Writing, Communicating: Standard 4 — Research and reasoning (developing questions, preparing for primary source observation)
  • CO Science: MS-LS2 — Ecosystems (human impact on animal populations)

Assessment Checklist

Student Behavior
Yes
Developing
Not Yet
Developed 2+ genuine inquiry questions
Engaged in emotional preparation discussion
Articulated a personal learning goal
Demonstrated understanding of shelter purpose/function
Identified at least one coping strategy for hard emotions

Dear Families,

Our class is preparing for next week's shelter visit as part of our Compassion Education program. Today students learned about how animal shelters work, developed research questions they want to explore, and discussed strategies for managing the complex emotions that can arise in shelter environments.

Ask your student: “What's your learning goal for the shelter visit?” and “What questions are you hoping to get answered?”

Reminder: Permission slips are due by [date]. Closed-toe shoes required on field trip day.

Thank you for supporting this meaningful learning experience.

Sincerely,
[Teacher Name]

Field Trip: “Our Day at the Shelter”

Grade: Middle School (6–8) Duration: Full day (6 hours including travel) Type: Experiential field trip Setting: Animal shelter + classroom debrief

Trip Overview

Students spend a structured half-day at a local animal shelter, observing operations, interacting with approved animals under staff supervision, interviewing shelter personnel, and documenting their experience. The afternoon includes a facilitated debrief and action-planning session back at school.

Materials & Logistics
  • Shelter Visit Journals (from Lesson 4, one per student)
  • Pencils, clipboards
  • Bus transportation (arranged with school)
  • Adult chaperones: 1:5 ratio (teachers + parent volunteers + CCE staff)
  • First aid kit
  • Hand sanitizer (industrial size)
  • Name tags for all students and adults
  • Contact list: all chaperones, school office, shelter manager
  • Water bottles and snacks for students
  • Thank-you card supplies (for afternoon activity)
  • Camera for documentation (staff member assigned)

Full-Day Schedule

8:00–8:15 AM: Departure Prep
Bus Loading & Expectations Review

At school. Attendance check. Review expectations (from Lesson 4 handout). Assign chaperone groups. Distribute journals and clipboards. Bus rules.

8:15–8:45 AM: Transit
Bus Ride

Journal prompt on the bus: “Write your learning goal from Lesson 4 at the top of today's page. Below it, write 3 things you're curious about and 1 thing you're nervous about.”

8:45–9:00 AM: Arrival & Welcome
Shelter Orientation

Shelter manager welcomes the group. Brief overview: how many animals currently housed, staffing, shelter philosophy. Ground rules repeated. Restroom break. Groups assigned to rotation stations.

9:00–10:30 AM: Rotation Stations (30 min each)
Three Learning Stations

Station A: Behind the Scenes Tour

  • Intake area, medical clinic, behavior assessment room
  • Staff explains process: how animals are evaluated, treated, matched with adopters
  • Journal prompt: “Sketch the intake process as a flowchart”

Station B: Supervised Animal Interaction

  • Shelter selects 3–4 calm, friendly animals appropriate for student interaction
  • Students sit quietly; animals brought to them by staff
  • Practice reading body language (from K lessons — now applied to unfamiliar animals)
  • Journal prompt: “Describe one animal you met. What was their body language telling you?”

Station C: Staff Interview

  • Small group interviews shelter staff and volunteers using prepared questions
  • Students record answers in journals
  • Encourage follow-up questions: “What surprised you about working here?” “What do you wish people understood?”
  • Journal prompt: “What's the most important thing you learned from talking to staff?”
10:30–10:45 AM: Snack Break
Outdoor Break

Snacks and water outside or in a break area. Informal debrief: “What's surprised you so far?” This is emotional processing time — let students talk freely.

10:45–11:30 AM: Service Project
Giving Back

Students contribute meaningfully to the shelter (arranged in advance with shelter staff). Options:

  • Making enrichment toys (knotted t-shirt toys, puzzle feeders from approved materials)
  • Writing adoption profiles for specific animals (creative writing meets marketing)
  • Organizing donated supplies
  • Creating “Welcome Home” cards for adopters to receive with their new pet

This is critical: students leave having CONTRIBUTED, not just observed. The emotional residue of “I helped” is dramatically different from “I watched.”

11:30–11:45 AM: Thank You & Departure
Group Thank-You

Students thank shelter staff verbally. Group photo (with permission). Load bus. Journals collected or secured.

11:45 AM–12:15 PM: Transit Back
Bus Reflection

Journal prompt: “Write continuously for 10 minutes about your experience. Don't stop writing. Just let your thoughts flow. What did you feel? What did you learn? What will you remember?”

12:15–12:45 PM: Lunch
Regular Lunch Period

Allow normal socialization. Students will naturally process with friends.

12:45–1:30 PM: Facilitated Debrief (Back in Classroom)
Processing & Meaning-Making
“Let's talk about today. I'm going to ask some questions. There are no wrong answers — this is about what YOU experienced and thought.”

Discussion prompts (choose 4–5):

  • “What was the hardest part of today? What made you feel uncomfortable?”
  • “What was the most hopeful thing you saw?”
  • “Did anything challenge an assumption you had about shelters?”
  • “How is what you saw different from what you expected?”
  • “What did you notice about the staff? How did they seem to feel about their work?”
  • “Think back to your learning goal. Did you answer your question? What did you discover?”
  • “If you could change ONE thing about how society treats animals, what would it be?”
1:30–2:00 PM: Action Planning
From Empathy to Action
“Empathy without action is just sadness. Today you saw real problems — but you also saw real people working on solutions every day. Now I want to ask: what can WE do? Not someday. This month. What's one concrete action our class can take?”

Brainstorm class actions: supply drive, fundraiser for shelter, writing adoption posts for social media, volunteer commitment, awareness campaign, letter to city council about funding. Vote on one action to pursue as a class.

2:00–2:15 PM: Closing
Thank-You Cards & Final Reflection

Students write thank-you cards to shelter staff. Final journal entry: “One thing I will do differently because of today.”

Standards Alignment
  • CASEL SEL: All 5 competencies (Self-Awareness, Self-Management, Social Awareness, Relationship Skills, Responsible Decision-Making)
  • CO Social Studies: Standard 4 — Civic engagement; Standard 1 — History (understanding community institutions)
  • CO Reading, Writing, Communicating: Standard 4 — Research (primary source observation, interview skills); Standard 3 — Writing (reflective journaling)
  • CO Science MS-LS2: Ecosystems, human impact on biodiversity
  • CO Comprehensive Health: Standard 2 — Interpersonal communication; Standard 4 — Social responsibility

Assessment Checklist

Student Behavior
Yes
Developing
Not Yet
Completed all journal prompts with substance
Followed shelter etiquette throughout visit
Asked at least one question of shelter staff
Participated meaningfully in service project
Contributed to debrief discussion
Proposed or supported a concrete class action

Dear Families,

Today your student visited [Shelter Name] as part of our Compassion Education program. They toured the facility, met shelter animals, interviewed staff, and contributed a service project. This afternoon, we processed the experience as a class and began planning a community action project.

Ask your student: “What surprised you most today?” and “What action is your class planning to take?”

Please know: Shelter visits can bring up big emotions. If your child wants to talk more about what they experienced, we encourage that. Our school counselor is also available.

Thank you for supporting this powerful learning experience.

Sincerely,
[Teacher Name]

Follow-Up Activities (Next 1–2 Weeks)
  • Execute class action project (supply drive, fundraiser, awareness campaign, etc.)
  • Reflective essay: “What I Learned About Compassion at the Shelter” (graded writing assignment)
  • Create presentation for another class or school assembly sharing what they learned
  • Individual follow-up: students research one animal welfare issue in depth
  • Send thank-you cards to shelter staff (mail within 1 week)