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Why Honesty Matters

Other • 30 • 25 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Other
30
25 students
25 April 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 2 of 20 in the unit "Honesty in Action". Lesson Title: Why Honesty Matters Lesson Description: This lesson will focus on the importance of honesty in relationships and communities, using stories and examples to illustrate its value.

Why Honesty Matters

Overview

Unit: Honesty in Action
Lesson: 2 of 20
Duration: 30 minutes
Class: Third Class (8–9 years)
Class Size: 25 students
Subject Area: Other – Social, Personal and Health Education (SPHE)
Curriculum Links:

  • Ireland’s Primary Language Curriculum (Communicative strand – Oral language development)
  • Social, Personal and Health Education (SPHE) curriculum – Myself Strand: Myself and Others
  • Aistear Framework (Well-being and Identity themes)

Lesson Aim

To help children understand why honesty is important in relationships and communities, using relatable stories and interactive activities to connect values with daily life.


Learning Outcomes

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

  • Explain what honesty means in simple terms.
  • Describe why honesty is important for trust and friendship.
  • Recognise everyday situations where being honest helps build good relationships.
  • Reflect on their own experiences of honesty in class or at home.

Resources Needed

  • Short illustrated storybook or printed story sheet (pre-prepared) on honesty
  • Whiteboard and markers
  • “Honesty Scenarios” cards (simple situations involving honesty or dishonesty)
  • Large paper or display board with a “Trust Tree” diagram drawn
  • Sticky notes or coloured paper squares
  • Crayons or markers

Lesson Structure

1. Warm-Up and Introduction (5 minutes)

  • Gather students in a circle to encourage openness and eye contact.
  • Begin with a brief discussion question:
    “Can anyone tell me what honesty means?”
  • Write key words on the board based on student responses (truth, telling, trust).
  • Share a simple definition: Honesty means telling the truth and doing the right thing.
  • Link honesty to feelings: “How do you feel when someone tells you the truth?”

2. Story Time: Honesty in Action (8 minutes)

  • Read aloud a short story featuring a relatable character who faces a choice about honesty — for example, a child who admits to breaking a classroom rule.
  • Pause and ask predictive or reflective questions, e.g.,
    “What do you think will happen if they tell the truth?”
    “How might the character feel after telling the truth?”
  • Highlight how honesty builds trust and helps fix problems.

3. Interactive Group Activity: Honesty Scenarios (10 minutes)

  • Divide the class into 5 groups of 5 children.
  • Give each group 2–3 honesty scenario cards. Example scenarios:
    • You find a lost toy in the playground. What do you do?
    • You forgot your homework but told the teacher you did it.
    • Your friend asks if you broke their pencil.
  • Groups discuss each scenario and decide what the honest thing to do is.
  • Each group shares one scenario and their answer with the class.
  • Teacher emphasises the value of honesty in each case and how it makes relationships stronger.

4. Trust Tree Activity: Building Trust with Honesty (5 minutes)

  • On the board, display the “Trust Tree” with branches labelled with words like Friends, Family, Schoolmates.
  • Invite students to come up, take sticky notes, and write/draw something honest they have done or could do.
  • Place the notes on the branches, explaining that honesty helps these relationships grow strong, like a healthy tree.
  • Highlight that everyone’s honesty helps build this tree together.

5. Conclusion and Reflection (2 minutes)

  • Recap the main points: What honesty means, why it matters, and different ways to be honest.
  • Final question for reflection:
    “Can you think of one time you told the truth and it helped someone?”
  • Encourage students to try to be honest today at school or home.

Differentiation Strategies

  • Provide sentence starters or visuals for students who need support expressing ideas.
  • For advanced learners, challenge them to think about what might happen if honesty is missing in a community.

Assessment for Learning

  • Observe student contributions during discussions and group work.
  • Review honesty scenario responses for understanding.
  • Informal check during Trust Tree activity to gauge personal connections.

Links to IE Curriculum & Educational Approaches

  • SPHE Strand: Myself and Others promotes understanding good relationships and moral values.
  • Oral Language Development: Encourages vocabulary linked to emotional literacy and social skills.
  • Aistear Well-being: Focuses on identity and belonging, reinforcing the concept of trust and honesty in community.
  • Builds on the holistic child-centred approach preferred in Irish education, encouraging active participation, reflection, and personal growth.

Teacher’s Notes & Tips

  • Use real-life examples that children can relate to from school or home environments.
  • Foster an open, safe atmosphere where students feel comfortable sharing ideas.
  • Use expressive reading to engage imagination during story time.
  • Encourage kindness and respect when discussing honesty, emphasising it’s about growing together, not punishment.

This detailed, interactive lesson plan will inspire teachers to instil honesty as a core value in their young learners, connecting curriculum standards with lively, age-appropriate activities.

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