Rooted Kids Collective · PreK–K Edition

Week 6:
I Can Handle It

A resilience and repair unit for early learners. Helping children understand that hard moments happen to everyone, big feelings pass, and mistakes can be fixed — closing out the Confidence & Boundaries unit with strength and warmth.

4Ages 3–6
1Lesson Plan
2Worksheets
4Activity Cards
Rooted Kids Collective · rootedkidscollective.com
Educator / Parent Lesson Plan
Week 6 · Lesson Plan
I Can Handle It
A complete facilitation guide for parents and educators. No prior SEL or clinical training required.
Research Foundation

Hall (2023) describes identity as something shaped through experience, not fixed at birth — meaning a hard moment, a mistake, or a mess-up is never the end of the story; it's one event inside a much bigger, still-unfolding sense of self. When children learn early that a hard moment can be followed by repair — and that repair brings people closer rather than further apart — they carry that flexibility, and that trust in relationship, into every identity they go on to build. (Hall, 2023; CASEL, 2020)

🌦️
Lesson Plan · Week 6
Resilience, Repair, and Confidence After Hard Moments
Age Range
PreK – Kindergarten (Ages 3–6)
Duration
3–5 sessions of 20–30 minutes each, or used flexibly across one week
Big Idea
Hard moments happen to everyone — mistakes, mess-ups, big feelings, things not going as planned. They don't last forever, and they don't mean something is wrong with us. When something goes wrong, we can calm down, repair what happened, and try again. Handling a hard moment doesn't mean not having feelings about it — it means knowing what to do with them.
SEL Alignment
CASEL Core Competencies: Self-Management (managing emotions, coping with setbacks and frustration) and Responsible Decision-Making (reflecting on a problem and choosing a repair)
Learning Goals
  • Child can name that mistakes and hard moments happen to everyone — including grown-ups
  • Child can identify at least one calming strategy to use during a hard moment
  • Child understands "repair" — saying sorry, fixing what broke, trying again — as a skill, not a punishment
  • Child can recognize the difference between a feeling (how it feels inside) and an action (what we do about it)
  • Child can reflect on something hard they've handled and feel proud of it
Materials
Worksheet 1 (When Things Go Wrong), Worksheet 2 (My Calm-Down Toolkit), Activity Cards, crayons or markers
Session 1
~25 min
Everyone Has Hard Moments
Start with a story from your own life: a time something went wrong for you — a spill, a mistake, a plan that fell apart — and how you felt. Use Worksheet 1 to help the child think of their own hard moment and what it felt like in their body and their feelings.
Therapist Note — Identity Is Shaped, Not Fixed

Hall (2023) writes about identity as an ongoing process of becoming, not a fixed verdict handed down by a single event. A child who believes "I made a mistake, and mistakes don't define me" is building exactly this understanding — that today's hard moment is one chapter, not the whole story, and that the story keeps being written.

Session 2
~20 min
My Calm-Down Toolkit
Introduce a few simple calming strategies: balloon breathing, counting to five, asking for a hug, or taking a quiet moment alone. Use Worksheet 2 to build a personal "toolkit" — let the child choose which ones feel good to them. Practice one together right now, before it's needed.

Facilitation tip: Practice calming strategies when everyone is calm, not in the middle of a meltdown. Like a fire drill, the goal is for the tool to already feel familiar by the time a hard moment actually happens.

Facilitator Script

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

You: Everyone has hard moments. Things break, plans change, and sometimes we make mistakes. Today we are going to practice talking about a hard moment and figuring out what helped, and what we might try next time.

Let me show you what I mean. One time I spilled a whole cup of juice all over the table. At first I felt really frustrated and my face got hot. Then I took a few slow breaths, got a towel, and cleaned it up with some help. Afterward I felt a lot calmer, and proud that I fixed it.

Now it is your turn. Can you think of a hard moment that happened to you recently? It could be big or small.

[Pause and let the child think and respond. Give them as much time as they need.]

[Validate whatever they share. You might say: Thank you for telling me about that, that does sound like a hard moment.]

Let us walk through it together. When that happened, what did you feel in your body or your feelings?

[Let the child respond. If they need help offer: Maybe you felt your tummy get tight, or your face get hot, or you felt like crying.]

What did you do next, or what helped even a little bit?

[Let the child respond. If they need help offer: Maybe you took a breath, asked for a hug, or someone helped you.]

If something like that happens again, is there a tool from your toolkit you might try, like balloon breathing or asking for help?

[Let the child respond. Validate whatever they choose, there is no wrong answer.]

You did such a great job thinking through that hard moment from start to finish. That shows you really can handle hard things.

[End by affirming their effort not their answer. Example: I am so proud of how you talked through that. Thinking about hard moments like this is exactly how we get stronger at handling them.]

Session 3
~20 min
Saying Sorry and Trying Again
Use Activity Cards 1 and 2. Talk about "repair" — what it looks like to say sorry, fix something that broke, or try again after a mistake. Practice with a pretend scenario (knocking over a friend's blocks, saying something unkind) and walk through the repair steps together.
Therapist Note — Repair as Connection, Not Shame

Hall (2023) names community and relationship as protective forces — the people around us are where resilience is built, not just inside us alone. Repair works the same way: saying sorry and trying again isn't a punishment for being "bad," it's a relational skill that brings people back together. Children who see repair modeled as warm and ordinary — rather than as a consequence to dread — learn that mistakes don't put relationships at risk.

Session 4–5
~25 min
I Handled It!
Use Activity Cards 3 and 4. Reflect together on a real hard moment from the past — something the child handled, even imperfectly — and celebrate it. Close out the week (and the whole Confidence & Boundaries unit!) with a small celebration of everything learned across all six weeks.

Note for parents: "Handling it" doesn't mean staying calm the whole time — it can include crying, needing a break, or asking for help, and still getting through it. Naming this out loud helps children feel proud of realistic resilience, not an unattainable "never gets upset" version.

Recommended Books
Recommended Books for This Week
Stories That Support This Week's Theme
The Most Magnificent Thing
Ashley Spires
Already introduced in Week 1 as a Brave Voice support. Returns here with new relevance as children now have language for resilience and can recognise the character's persistence as an example of handling hard things.
Beautiful Oops
Barney Saltzberg
Reframes mistakes as creative opportunities. Directly supports this week's theme of finding capability inside difficult moments rather than seeing mistakes as evidence of failure.
After the Fall
Dan Santat
A story about Humpty Dumpty getting back up. Tackles fear, repair, and the courage it takes to try again after something hard. Perfectly matches the week's focus on resilience after difficult moments.
Differentiation
For younger learners (3–4): Focus on one calming strategy (balloon breathing works well) and one repair phrase ("I'm sorry, let's fix it"). Keep the hard moment example small and concrete (a toy falling, a tower tumbling).

For children with anxiety, perfectionism, or low self-esteem: Be extra explicit that mistakes don't make someone "bad" and that repair is not a punishment. These children may need more reassurance before they can engage with Worksheet 1 without distress — it's okay to start with Worksheet 2 instead.

For neurodivergent learners: Offer a range of calming strategies, including sensory tools (a soft object to squeeze, noise-reducing headphones) and movement breaks, not just stillness-based ones. Repair can be non-verbal too — a drawn picture, a gesture, or a hand offered can all count.
Coming Next
Unit 2: Identity & Culture — "My Roots, My World." This week wraps Unit 1: Confidence & Boundaries — congratulations on completing "My Strong Self"!
Worksheet 1 · Print & Complete
Worksheet 1 · Week 6
When Things Go Wrong 🌦️
Name:
Date:

✏️ Hard moments happen to everyone — even grown-ups! Let's think about a hard moment and what happened next.

Draw a hard moment that happened to you (a toy breaking, falling down, making a mistake)
How did your body and feelings feel? Circle the face that matches.
😢
Sad
😠
Mad
😳
Embarrassed
😟
Worried
😐
Frozen
What happened next? Write or tell a grown-up.

🌱 True things to remember (read these together!):

"Everyone makes mistakes — even the grown-ups I love."
I believe this
"My big feelings don't last forever — they come and they go."
I believe this
"A mistake doesn't mean something is wrong with me."
I believe this
"When something goes wrong, I can ask for help."
I believe this
Worksheet 2 · Print & Complete
Worksheet 2 · Week 6
My Calm-Down Toolkit 🧰
Name:
Date:

✏️ Everyone needs tools to help with big feelings — just like a toolbox has different tools for different jobs! Let's build YOUR calm-down toolkit.

🧰 My Calm-Down Tools — circle the ones you want to try!

🎈 Balloon Breath
Breathe in big, breathe out slow
🔢 Count to 5
1... 2... 3... 4... 5...
🤗 Ask for a Hug
"Can I have a hug?"
🧸 Quiet Spot
A cozy place to take a break
💧 Have a Cry
Tears help feelings move
🗣️ Tell Someone
"I need help, please"

🔧 The Repair Steps — when something goes wrong, we can:

What Happened
I knocked over my friend's tower by accident.
Repair Step 1: Say Sorry
"I'm sorry I knocked it over."
What's Next
Something is broken or messy.
Repair Step 2: Fix It
"Let's build it back up together."
What's Next
I'm ready to keep going.
Repair Step 3: Try Again
"I can try again — it's okay if it's not perfect."
Next time I feel a big feeling, I can try:
Draw yourself using one of your calm-down tools
Activity Cards · Print & Cut
Activity Cards · Week 6
I Can Handle It
Print, cut along the borders, and use throughout the week. Laminate for repeated use.
Activity Card 1 · Calming Practice
🌬️ Balloon Breathing
How to play:
  • Pretend your belly is a balloon. Breathe in slowly through your nose — feel the balloon fill up.
  • Breathe out slowly through your mouth — feel the balloon get small again.
  • Repeat 3–5 times, nice and slow.

Try it: Practice this together when everyone is calm, so it's easy to remember when a hard moment happens.
Activity Card 2 · Role-Play
🔧 Sorry & Repair
How to play: Use stuffed animals or puppets to act out a hard moment — one accidentally knocks over the other's blocks.
  • Practice saying sorry: "I'm sorry, that was an accident."
  • Practice fixing it: build the blocks back up together.
  • Practice trying again: "Can we keep playing?"

Talk about how it felt to say sorry, and how it felt to hear it.
Activity Card 3 · Discussion
💪 I Can Handle It!
Talk it through together:
  • "Tell me about a time something hard happened and you handled it — even if you cried, or needed help, or it took a few tries."
  • "What helped you get through it?"
  • "What's one calm-down tool you might try next time?"

Remember: Handling something hard doesn't mean not having feelings about it — it means getting through it, feelings and all.
Activity Card 4 · Unit Celebration
🎉 Celebrate Unit 1!
You did it! Over the past six weeks, you've learned:
  • Week 1: Who you are, and what makes you you
  • Week 2: That your body belongs to you, and you can trust how it feels
  • Week 3: The rules that keep your body safe, and who you can tell if something feels wrong
  • Week 4: How to say yes, no, and maybe — and mean it kindly
  • Week 5: That other people have a yes, no, and maybe too, and their no matters just as much as yours
  • Week 6: That hard moments happen, and you can handle them

Celebrate it: Draw or write your favourite thing you learned this month.