Rooted Kids Collective · PreK–K Edition

Week 4:
Yes, No, Maybe

A consent and assertiveness unit for early learners. Helping children ask clearly, say no with kindness, and trust that "maybe" is a complete answer too — grounded in SEL frameworks and therapeutic best practice.

4Ages 3–6
1Lesson Plan
2Worksheets
4Activity Cards
Rooted Kids Collective · rootedkidscollective.com
Educator / Parent Lesson Plan
Week 4 · Lesson Plan
Yes, No, Maybe
A complete facilitation guide for parents and educators. No prior SEL or clinical training required.
Setting Up Week 5

The yes, no, and maybe language children practise this week becomes a two way street in Week 5. Once children can use these words for themselves, the next step is learning to notice and honour them when someone else uses them too. This week gives children the words. Week 5 teaches them to listen for those same words in others.

Research Foundation

This week builds directly on self-determination — what Hall (2023) describes, citing Reid-Merritt (2010), as the opposite of the identity-altering pressure institutions can place on children. "Yes," "no," and "maybe" are the smallest, most everyday units of self-determination: knowing what you want, saying it clearly, and trusting that the answer — whichever one it is — is allowed to stand. Children who practice this in low-stakes moments (a game, a snack, a hug) build the same internal muscle they'll need in higher-stakes ones later. (Hall, 2023; CASEL, 2020)

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Lesson Plan · Week 4
Consent Language, Assertiveness, and Saying No With Kindness
Age Range
PreK – Kindergarten (Ages 3–6)
Duration
3–5 sessions of 20–30 minutes each, or used flexibly across one week
Big Idea
"Yes," "no," and "maybe" are all complete answers. Children learn to ask clearly for what they want, to say no in a kind and calm way, and to understand that someone else's "no" — or their own "maybe, I need to think" — is just as valid as a "yes."
SEL Alignment
CASEL Core Competencies: Relationship Skills (communication, assertiveness, healthy boundary-setting) and Social Awareness (perspective-taking — recognizing and respecting other people's answers too)
Learning Goals
  • Child can give a "yes," "no," or "maybe/not right now" answer in everyday situations
  • Child can practice saying no in a kind, clear voice — not silently, and not by being unkind
  • Child can name that someone else's "no" is a complete answer too, even if it's disappointing
  • Child can tell the difference between asking for something and demanding it
  • Child can identify a moment where "maybe" or "I need to think about it" is the honest answer
Materials
Worksheet 1 (Yes, No, or Maybe?), Worksheet 2 (Saying No With Kindness), Activity Cards, crayons or markers
Session 1
~25 min
Yes, No, and Maybe Are All Okay
Introduce the idea with a traffic light: "Green means yes, red means no, and yellow means maybe — and all three are good answers!" Use Worksheet 1 together — read each everyday scenario aloud and sort it into Yes, No, or Maybe. Let the child's honest answer stand, even if it surprises you.
Accessibility Note

A printable stoplight visual is included with this week for younger learners and neurodivergent children who may find it easier to point to a colour than to read or write their answer.

To use: Print the stoplight page and place it in front of the child. Read each question aloud and invite them to point to the colour that matches their answer.

This variation requires no writing or drawing and removes the pressure of producing a verbal response. The child simply points. Their answer is complete and valid.

This approach is recommended for:

  • Children ages 3 to 4 who are pre-readers
  • Children with expressive language differences
  • Children with anxiety who find written tasks activating
  • Any child who communicates more comfortably through pointing or gesture than through words or drawing

All answers given by pointing to the stoplight carry exactly the same weight as written or drawn answers. There is no lesser version of participation here.

Therapist Note — Practising Self-Determination

Hall (2023), drawing on Reid-Merritt (2010), frames self-determination — knowing what you want and value, and having that count — as the foundation of liberation work, starting in early childhood.

When a child says "no" to touch or "maybe" to a game and that answer is simply accepted, they are rehearsing the exact internal process they'll need later to recognise and act on their own wants and limits in much higher-stakes situations.

Every time we honour a child's yes, no, or maybe in a low-stakes moment, we are building the internal architecture they will rely on for the rest of their lives.

Hall, S. (2023). Shaping identities: How social work education made me white. Master of Social Work Thesis, McMaster University.
Reid-Merritt, P. (2010). Righteous self-determination: The black social work movement in America. Inprint Editions.

Session 2
~20 min
Saying No With Kindness
Talk about how "no" can sound kind: a calm voice, a clear word, maybe even "no thank you." Use Worksheet 2 to practice turning a "big" no (yelling, pushing, grabbing) into a "kind" no (calm voice, words, a hand held up). Practice out loud together a few times — this is a physical skill as much as a verbal one.

Facilitation tip: Narrate your own kind "no"s out loud during the week — "No thank you, I don't want to right now, but I appreciate you asking." Hearing an adult say no calmly, without guilt or anger, is one of the most powerful models a child can have.

Facilitator Script

Here is an example of how to guide this activity with your child or student:

You: Today we are going to practise saying yes, no, and maybe.

All three answers are equally good. What matters is that the answer is honest and it is yours.

Let me show you what I mean.

If I asked you: Do you want to come with me to the store?

You might say yes because you really want to go.
You might say no because you want to stay home.
You might say maybe because you are not sure yet.

And all three of those answers are completely okay.

Let us practise together. I am going to ask you something and you answer honestly. Yes, no, or maybe.

Do you want to go for a walk right now?

[Pause and wait for the child to answer. Accept whatever they say without question or persuasion.]

That is a great answer because it is your honest one.

Now let us try another one.

If a friend asked you to play a game you are not sure about, what might you say?

[Pause for response. If the child says "maybe," explore: "What would help you decide?" If they say "no," affirm: "That is a complete answer. No is enough."]

Remember: yes, no, and maybe are all good answers. What makes an answer good is that it is true for you.

Session 3
~20 min
Asking vs. Demanding — and Receiving a "No"
Use Activity Cards 1 and 2. Practice turning demands ("Give me that!") into asks ("Can I have a turn, please?"). Then practice the other side: what do we do with our body and our feelings when someone tells us no? Big feelings about a "no" are allowed — what matters is what we do with them.
Therapist Note — Tolerating Disappointment

Learning to receive a "no" without it threatening one's sense of self is a community-building skill as much as an individual one — Hall (2023) names community as a core protective factor. A child who can hear "not right now" from a friend and stay in relationship with them (rather than feeling rejected entirely) is practicing the resilience that holds relationships — and communities — together.

Session 4–5
~25 min
When I'm Not Sure — "Maybe" Is Honest Too
Use Activity Cards 3 and 4. Talk about times grown-ups feel "maybe" too — not knowing yet is normal, not a problem to fix. Practice the phrase "I need to think about it" or "maybe later" as a real, respectable answer. Close the week by reflecting together on a moment the child used their yes, no, or maybe voice.

Note for parents: Where possible, let "maybe" actually mean maybe — circle back later rather than treating it as a soft "no" to be overridden. This keeps the word trustworthy, which keeps the child's voice trustworthy too.

Recommended Books
Recommended Books for This Week
Stories That Support This Week's Theme
The Recess Queen
Alexis O'Neill
A story about speaking up, changing dynamics, and the power of one kind and assertive voice. Gives children a narrative model for using their own voice confidently.
Howard B. Wigglebottom Learns to Listen
Howard Binkow
Explores the balance between speaking up and listening, which sits at the heart of healthy boundary communication for this age group.
Chrysanthemum
Kevin Henkes
A story about self acceptance when others try to make you feel small. Connects to the assertiveness theme by showing children what it looks like to stay rooted in who you are even under social pressure.
Differentiation
For younger learners (3–4): Focus on Sessions 1 and 2. Use the traffic light gestures (thumbs up / down / sideways) instead of writing. Keep scenarios concrete and immediate ("Do you want this snack right now?").

For children with anxiety or low self-esteem: Some children find "no" especially hard to say to adults. Don't push for it in real time during this week — practice stays in the world of pretend and worksheets first. The goal is building the muscle, not testing it on the spot.

For neurodivergent learners: If a flat or scripted "no" is more accessible than a "warm" one, that's a valid version too — the goal is a clear, respected no, not a performance of friendliness. Visual supports (the traffic light, the cards) can carry more weight than tone here.
Coming Next
Week 5: Your No Matters Too — recognising other people's yes, no, and maybe, and learning how to respond when someone sets a boundary with you.
Worksheet 1 · Print & Complete
Worksheet 1 · Week 4
Yes, No, or Maybe? 🚦
Name:
Date:

✏️ Green means YES, red means NO, and yellow means MAYBE — and all three are good answers! Read each one and decide what's true for YOU.

🖍️ For each question below, colour in the circle green for YES, red for NO, or yellow for MAYBE. All three are good answers!

"Do you want to play tag right now?"
Yes
Maybe
No
"Can your friend have a turn with your favourite toy?"
Yes
Maybe
No
"Do you want a hug right now?"
Yes
Maybe
No
"Do you want to try the new food on your plate?"
Yes
Maybe
No
Draw a time YOU said "yes" to something and felt good about it
Draw a time YOU said "no" and that was okay
Visual Support · Print & Use
NO
MAYBE
YES
Point to how you feel!
Green means YES, Yellow means MAYBE, Red means NO
Worksheet 2 · Print & Complete
Worksheet 2 · Week 4
Saying No With Kindness 🗣️
Name:
Date:

✏️ "No" can be a calm word. Let's practice turning a "big" no into a "kind" no — they both mean the same thing, but one is easier for everyone to hear.

Draw a "big" no (yelling, pushing, grabbing — what does it look like?)
Draw a "kind" no (calm voice, words, a hand held up — what does IT look like?)

🔄 Flip it! Read the "big" no — then write or circle the "kind" no flip:

Big No
Grabbing the toy back and yelling "MINE!"
For example: the big no might be grabbing the toy back and yelling "mine!" The kind no might be saying, "Please give that back — that's mine, I wasn't done with it."
Kind No
"No thank you, I'm still using this."
Big No
Running away and hiding instead of answering.
For example: the big no might be walking away without saying anything, or saying "that game is stupid." The kind no might be saying, "No thank you, I don't feel like playing that right now."
Kind No
Big No
Pushing someone away without saying anything.
For example: the big no might be pushing the person away. The kind no might be saying, "No thank you, I don't want a hug right now, but maybe later."
Kind No
Big No
Saying "no" and turning away without explaining.
For example: the big no might be saying no and turning away. The kind no might be saying, "I'm still using this — you can have a turn when I'm finished."
Kind No
A "maybe" sentence I can use when I'm not sure:
"Maybe — can I think about it and tell you in a little bit?"
How does it feel when someone hears your "no" and respects it? Circle the face that matches!
😄
Happy
💪
Strong
😊
Calm
😌
Relieved
😐
Okay
Activity Cards · Print & Cut
Activity Cards · Week 4
Yes, No, Maybe
Print, cut along the borders, and use throughout the week. Laminate for repeated use.
Activity Card 1 · Movement Game
🚦 Yes, No, Maybe Game
How to play:
  • Call out a scenario. The child responds with a gesture: thumbs up (yes), thumbs down (no), or hand flat side to side (maybe).
  • There's no "right" answer — the goal is an honest, fast first response.

Try these:
  • "Ice cream for breakfast?"
  • "A hug right now?"
  • "Sharing your favourite toy?"
  • "Trying a new game?"
Activity Card 2 · Phrase Practice
🎁 Asking vs. Demanding
How to play: Read a "demand" out loud. Take turns turning it into an "ask."
  • "Give me that!" → "Can I have a turn, please?"
  • "Move!" → "Excuse me, can I get by?"
  • "I want to go first!" → "Can I go first this time?"

Then practice receiving a "no": Say the ask out loud, have a grown-up say "Maybe next time" — and practice taking a breath and saying "Okay" out loud.
Activity Card 3 · Role-Play
🗣️ Kind No Practice
Practice saying these in a calm, clear voice:
  • "No thank you."
  • "Not right now, maybe later."
  • "I don't want to do that."
  • "Please stop."

Try it: Use stuffed animals to act out a friend asking to swap snacks, or to play a different game. Practice saying a kind no — and practice the friend hearing it and saying "okay."
Activity Card 4 · Week Reflection
🌱 Maybe Means I'm Thinking
Talk it through together:
  • Was there a moment this week you said yes, no, or maybe and it felt good?
  • Was there a time someone told YOU "no" or "maybe" — how did that feel, and what did you do?
  • "Maybe" means "I'm still thinking" — that's a real, honest answer.

Celebrate it: Draw or write your favourite "voice moment" from this week below.