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|Grades 2-5| Give Kids the Tools They Need to Control Their Emotions Allison Edwards’ How to Crack Your Peanut helps kids understand why they sometimes lose control and make bad decisions. When kids learn how...
|Grades K-6| What do you do with all your feelings? In Marcy’s Having All the Feels, counselor and therapist Allison Edwards explores how sometimes feeling so many feelings doesn’t feel so good at all...
|Grades K-5| Kyle is a fourth-grader who sometimes feels blue and out of sorts. He’s not sure why, but he can never bounce back when he gets into a funk. When things go wrong at school or home, he can’t...
|Grades 1-6| Talking about feelings can be fun! Children feel better as they become more skilled at identifying and expressing their feelings. This card game is designed to encourage children to talk about their...
|Grades 2-12| 32 panel Thumball (4″). With this ball, players learn about emotions and develop their feeling word vocabularies. If it is an Emoji, tell one or more words that describe that feeling. If it is a word,...
|Grades PK-2| "It's okay to feel mad. This is what I do to help me feel better. I stop and say a rhyme. Let's try it together." 1-2-3 A Calmer Me introduces children to a simple rhyme they...
|Grades K-6| Boys’ emotions are too often overlooked. Told from early childhood to “man up” or assured they’re “tougher than” any insult or injury, boys have traditionally been...
|Grades 3-6| Feelings are the center of everything. They tell us when to laugh, cry, be angry, be sad, be jealous, and how to react to every emotion we experience. This comprehensive, reproducible book helps...