INSIDE OUT - TEACHING CHILDREN ABOUT EMOTIONS
INSIDE OUT - TEACHING
CHILDREN ABOUT EMOTIONSthis article is about the movie INSIDE OUT.
"Last weekend, my children and I went to see the new Disney/Pixar
movie Inside
Out and it quickly
became my most favorite family movie ever! Putting aside for a moment that Inside Out is a
theme park attraction waiting to happen and that I possibly laughed at the
dream sequence more than my kids, it's message is one that resonated strongly
with me as a parent and teacher - that without sadness, there is no joy."
Inside Out follows
the story of 11 year old Riley as she and her family move house from one side
of the US to the other and we are given a front row seat to the inside
mechanisms of her brain as she deals with this milestone event. We are
introduced to Joy, Sadness, Fear, Disgust and Anger who are in
HQ directing Riley just as they are all of us (even dogs and cats). At the
start of the movie, everyone sees Joy as the star in Riley's production which
reminded me of many conversations I have had with parents over the last few
years as an educator. As adults, we spend very few days being happy all day
long. We know that we can experience many emotions in a
day but sometimes expect our children to be different.
Consequently, many young
children do not
recognize that experiencing different emotions is both normal and healthy. Disney/Pixar have done
an excellent job in creating characters young children can identify with and
understand. Whilst we may want to shield our children from the worst life can
throw at us, they do need to see us showing our emotions and most importantly,
how we cope and regulate them. We need our children to see how resilient we are,
that life is a balance, that without sadness, there can be no joy.
Of course trying to learn how to regulate your emotions can be
hard work the younger you are. Add in long days at
school, negotiating with peers, not enough sleep or not enough of the
right foods, and the job of self-regulating
emotions gets
harder still. As a parent of three, I've been there. It's not easy but I can
see this movie and its characters being a powerful tool that can be used to
help children navigate their way through those difficult moments. Their most powerful emotions now
have a face, a colour and even a name!
Case in point, it's nearing the end of second term here in
Australia and after a long day at school, my six year old was not impressed by
the actions of her two older sisters. Her face told the world she was losing
the fight and Anger was about to win. Fresh from watching Inside Out, I simply asked her who
was driving? Who had control of the console in HQ right now inside her head?
She stopped, looked at me and then very slowly started to smile. Anger had been
push out of the way for now but we were able to talk about how she felt when
Anger was in control - that she felt herself getting hot like when he burnt a
hole in the window, that her eyes felt 'all squinty' and that her breathing was
hard. We also talked about what she can do to change that. When she's home, she
likes to go and jump on the trampoline by herself whereas one of her sisters
likes some time to herself in her room where she'll sit and read for a while.
As a classroom teacher of young children, I think having a set of these
characters from Inside
Out in the
classroom will prove to be a useful tool as students would have a visual prompt
for them to be able to help explain their feelings. Or have some of these free Inside Out colouring in pages available for them to use while they calm down and regain
control of their emotions.
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