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Practising Forgiveness

Religious Education • 40 • 24 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Religious Education
40
24 students
29 April 2026

Teaching Instructions

Create a 40-minute follow-up lesson plan for 3rd and 4th class Religious Education on the topic of forgiveness, building on the previous lesson "Understanding Forgiveness." This follow-up lesson should deepen students' understanding of forgiveness, focusing on practical ways to practice forgiveness in daily life, exploring its impact on relationships and community. Include interactive activities, reflection, and group discussion. The lesson should align with the Irish curriculum and include success criteria, differentiation strategies for diverse learners, and extension activities for advanced learners.

Overview

This 40-minute lesson for 3rd and 4th class deepens students’ understanding of forgiveness by focusing on practical ways to practise forgiveness in daily life and exploring its positive impact on relationships and community. It builds on the prior lesson, "Understanding Forgiveness," and aligns closely with the Irish Curriculum Framework for Religious Education (RE), specifically addressing the strand unit: Theme 3 – Justice and moral responsibility. Activities integrate interactive group work, reflection, and discussion to support different learning styles.


Curriculum Links

Strand: Values and Beliefs
Strand Unit: Justice and moral responsibility – To appreciate the role of forgiveness in building just relationships and communities
Learning Outcomes:

  • 3rd Class:
    • Recognise and describe ways of forgiving others in practical actions (SESE: Myself and the wider world).
    • Understand the impact of forgiveness on relationships and community harmony.
  • 4th Class:
    • Explain why forgiveness is important for personal wellbeing and social harmony.
    • Demonstrate a willingness to practise forgiveness in everyday situations.

Key Skills Developed: Empathy, moral reasoning, interpersonal communication, reflection, and collaboration.


Success Criteria

By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:

  • Identify at least three practical ways to forgive others in everyday situations.
  • Explain how forgiveness strengthens relationships and communities.
  • Reflect on a personal experience or hypothetical scenario involving forgiveness.
  • Work collaboratively to suggest solutions that involve forgiveness in a given moral dilemma.

Lesson Breakdown (40 minutes)

1. Recap and Connect (5 mins)

  • Begin with a brief recap of the previous lesson: “What is forgiveness?”
  • Use simple questioning:
    • “What does forgiveness mean to you?”
    • “Can you remember a time someone forgave you?”
  • Link this to today’s goal: How can we practise forgiveness every day?

2. Interactive Brainstorm: Ways to Forgive (8 mins)

  • In small groups of 4, brainstorm practical ways to forgive (e.g., saying sorry, giving someone a second chance, letting go of anger).
  • Each group lists at least 3 ways on a shared poster.
  • Groups present one or two ideas aloud.
  • Teacher scribes a master list on the board.

Differentiation: Provide sentence starters or visuals for those who need extra support (e.g., “I can forgive by…”).

3. Story and Reflection: Forgiveness in Action (10 mins)

  • Tell or read a short age-appropriate story highlighting forgiveness impacting a community (e.g., a neighbour forgiving a mistake).
  • Facilitate a class discussion using guided questions:
    • “How did forgiveness help the people in the story?”
    • “What would have happened if they didn’t forgive?”
  • Invite students to quietly reflect and write or draw a response to: “When is forgiveness hard? What can help us forgive?”

Extension: Advanced learners create their own short story or script role-play demonstrating forgiveness.

4. Group Activity: Forgiveness Dilemma (10 mins)

  • Present a realistic everyday dilemma where forgiveness is needed (e.g., a classmate breaks a favourite pencil by accident).
  • Groups discuss:
    • What could you do to practise forgiveness here?
    • How would forgiveness help your relationship?
  • Groups share ideas; teacher highlights key points linking back to lesson objectives.

Differentiation: Groups with diverse learners can use sentence frames or drawing to express their ideas.

5. Class Reflection and Consolidation (5 mins)

  • Encourage volunteers to share a personal thought or something new learned about forgiveness.
  • Summarise key ideas on the board emphasizing practical forgiveness helps us and others feel better and keeps communities strong.
  • Set a ‘Forgiveness Challenge’: Ask pupils to try one way to practise forgiveness this week and share next lesson.

Assessment Opportunities

  • Observation of group discussions and presentations for understanding and engagement.
  • Review of written/drawn reflections for depth of personal insight.
  • Informal questioning to assess comprehension of forgiveness’s impact.

Differentiation Strategies

  • Use visual aids and sentence starters for emerging learners or those with additional needs.
  • Pair verbal learners with peer supports.
  • Provide scaffolded writing/drawing tasks for those less confident in writing.
  • Provide extension through creative writing or role-play for advanced learners.

Extension Activity for Advanced Learners

  • Create a “Forgiveness Diary” for a week where the pupil notes daily times they chose to forgive or found it difficult, reflecting on feelings and outcomes.
  • Present their diary creatively through drawings, poems, or digital storytelling.

Resources Required

  • Chart paper/whiteboard
  • Markers, pens, colouring materials
  • Short story or scripted text on forgiveness
  • Pre-prepared dilemma scenarios on cards

Teacher Notes

  • Emphasise safe emotional environment encouraging openness without judgement.
  • Manage time carefully to ensure all sections are covered smoothly.
  • Encourage respect and listening during sharing and discussions to foster community values.

This lesson will confidently guide pupils to connect forgiveness with daily practical choices and deeper social understanding, fulfilling core competencies in the Irish Religious Education curriculum and enriching their moral and personal development.

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