Building a positive school culture frequently starts with teaching fundamental behavioral skills. Among these, the ability to show respect forms a foundation for classroom climate, peer relationships, and student well-being. For elementary-aged children, explicit visual supports can make an important difference in developing and generalizing these essential behaviors. The Showing Respect Goal Poster from Everyday Speech is a no-prep printable designed for practical use in classrooms, therapy spaces, and small group sessions. This article examines strategies for introducing, teaching, and reinforcing respectful behaviors using the poster, while also equipping other clinicians with ideas for continued support after the lesson.
What Is Showing Respect?
Showing respect is demonstrating consideration and care for the feelings, rights, and boundaries of others. In a school setting, respect is reflected through words, actions, and body language when interacting with peers, teachers, and staff. For elementary students, respectful behavior often looks like listening to others, using polite language, waiting turns, following directions, and handling disagreements calmly. It also relates to respecting property, personal space, and classroom rules.
The Showing Respect Goal Poster offers clear, age-appropriate examples and tangible steps for students. By providing concrete visuals, it breaks down what can often be an abstract concept into simple, achievable actions. The result is that students are equipped with a model of expected behavior that can be referenced consistently across settings.
Why Teach Showing Respect?
Embedding respectful behaviors into the daily school routine brings positive outcomes for individual students and the wider learning community. Teaching respect:
- Promotes a safer and more inclusive classroom environment
- Reduces conflict and instances of bullying
- Builds strong teacher-student and peer relationships
- Supports the development of self-control and empathy
- Creates a foundation for other social and academic skills
- Reinforces positive school behavior expectations
- Provides students with language and tools to navigate disagreements
Proactive instruction on showing respect prevents many minor disruptions, increases instructional time, and empowers students to take ownership of their actions.
Lesson Plan: Using Showing Respect Goal Poster
The Showing Respect Goal Poster is a straightforward visual tool. Its simplicity lends itself to whole-class lessons, small groups, or individualized support. Below is a sample lesson plan clinicians can follow.
Step 1: Introduction to Respect
Begin by asking students what respect means and where they have seen or experienced respect, either at school or outside. Encourage a few volunteers to share examples. This step helps to activate prior knowledge and hooks students’ interest in the topic.
- Use language that is developmentally appropriate. For younger students, equate respect with kindness, listening, or treating others how you want to be treated.
- Consider role-playing a brief respectful interaction, such as saying “thank you” when given something or listening when someone else is talking.
Step 2: Visual Exploration of the Goal Poster
Display the Showing Respect Goal Poster for the group to see. A printed copy, projected image, or small group handout all work well. The poster can be downloaded directly here.
- Read through each bullet or picture on the poster.
- Pause between steps and invite students to give examples for each item. For instance, when the poster says “Use kind words,” prompt the group for examples of kind phrases.
- Reinforce clarity by explicitly modeling the listed behaviors and having students mirror them.
Step 3: Interactive Practice
Practice makes abstract skills more concrete. Create simple, realistic scenarios common to classrooms or playgrounds. For each, ask a student to demonstrate a respectful response while referencing the poster.
Sample scenarios:
- A classmate accidentally bumps into another student.
- Two students want to play with the same game during free time.
- The teacher asks for quiet during a lesson.
Encourage the observing students to identify which respectful behaviors from the poster are being shown during each demonstration.
Step 4: Group Discussion and Reflection
Invite students to reflect. Ask guiding questions such as:
- Why is showing respect important in our classroom?
- How does it feel when others show us respect?
- What can we do if we forget to show respect?
Affirm all contributions, reinforcing that mistakes are a part of learning and that everyone has opportunities to improve.
Step 5: Setting Personal or Group Goals
Encourage students to choose one or two respectful behaviors from the poster as their “focus goals” for the week. Display the poster in a prominent location as a daily reminder. If working one-on-one or in a small group, students can keep a personal copy of the poster in their desk, backpack, or take home for generalization.
Provide a quick check-in routine where students can assess how they are doing with their respect goals. This could be a thumbs up/down at the end of each day, a private check-in, or a brief journal reflection.
Supporting Showing Respect After the Activity
Sustaining gains in respectful behavior relies on consistent reinforcement and multiple opportunities for practice. After the lesson, the following strategies help reinforce the skill:
- Visual reminders: Keep the Showing Respect Goal Poster clearly visible in the classroom, therapy area, or hallway. Visual cues support memory and provide an ongoing anchor for behavior.
- Frequent praise: Offer specific praise when students display the behaviors listed on the poster. Phrases like, “I noticed you waited your turn, that shows respect,” reinforce the connection between action and outcome.
- Peer role models: Highlight when students demonstrate respect. In a class setting, ask students to share positive examples of respect that they observed among peers.
- Routine integration: Blend respectful language and concepts into daily routines, transitions, and group projects. Over time, these behaviors become a natural part of the classroom culture.
- Family involvement: Consider sending a copy of the poster home or sharing it during family-teacher communication. Invite families to watch for and celebrate examples of respect at home and in the community.
- Revisit and practice: Plan for regular follow-ups. Use morning meetings or closing circles to check in on progress, share updates, and refresh the goal poster language together.
- Problem-solving support: When disrespectful behavior occurs, reference the poster as part of a calm problem-solving process. Help students connect their choices to the specific expectations in a supportive, non-punitive way.
Wrapping Up: Cultivating a Culture of Respect in Elementary Settings
Explicit teaching of respectful behavior benefits all students and helps create a thriving school environment. The Showing Respect Goal Poster offers a practical, visually engaging way to make expectations clear, support social skill development, and remind students how to treat one another in and out of the classroom. With frequent reinforcement, continued discussion, and integration across daily routines, students gain a deeper understanding of respect as both a value and an everyday action. School-based clinicians, teachers, and staff who use this goal poster provide students with an accessible, actionable tool for positive behavior and stronger relationships. Download the poster here, print it for your space, and begin building the foundation for respectful, empathetic learning communities.