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Easter Lesson plans to Teach generosity, build empathy and global awareness

Hello my friends of the Omschool! With Easter right around the corner, I'm thinking about Catholic Lenten values of fasting, prayer and almsgiving.  From there my mind goes to lesson plans which teach generosity, boost empathy and encourage giving over getting. 

Now, having said that, ask any normal red-blooded kid what he looks forward to most about Christmas or Easter or his birthday or any gift-giving holiday, and he will unabashedly state, "the presents!" (and stop just short of adding "duh!") And I don't say that to judge. I understand. Omi was a kid too. And children aren't selfish, per se; they like getting presents and have been taught to expect things. So before you say a child is spoiled or selfish, look to home. Because parents (and Omis and Opis) talk big about the importance of giving over receiving and we overspend, overindulge and over-gift children. This reinforces to kids that getting is the essence of Christmas, Easter, birthdays, etc. 

So instead of bemoaning how greedy "everyone" is, I'm going to start in my own backyards, with some de-cluttering of wants. Here are ideas to teach children (and the rest of us) holiday generosity and unselfishness? Cuz the best medicine for the greedy, green-eyed gimmes (of adults and children) is giving. Here are pay-it-forward activities.

Purge toys. Adults, us too! During Lent, we Catholics were supposed to fast, give and pray. We do this in  Advent which is the Christian season of penance before Christmas. Catholics spend (or should spend) those four weeks leading up to Christmas and the seven before Lent in service and preparation. To teach awareness of global poverty, compared to our own prosperity. Purge toy cupboards and donated gently-used items. Before Christmas and Easter, assign kids to collect X-number of toys to weed out. A good ratio is to donate one old for every new one they'll get. This keeps us all from getting too greedy and possessive. Make a family event of bringing the toys to a rescue mission, homeless shelter, church or mission. Not only does this teach unselfishness, it reduces clutter in your home.

Teach genuine generosity and unselfishness. It's easy to donate broken toys or our junk. Kids (and adults) should not be allowed to give away their junk thinking they're doing a good deed. That's not sharing, it's unloading trash. Remind them that nobody wants someone else's worthless castoffs for Christmas (or at any time). It's greedy, degrading and negates the value of giving. Real gifts cost the giver something. Most parents have gone without so that they have money to give their children things. Giving should hurt a little. Teach kids that just as parents sacrifice for their children, children should give sacrificially too.

Teach solidarity. Before giving any toy, even a new one, ask kids what things they would like to receive. Encourage them to put themselves in the receiving child's shoes. Give toys for kids in your children's age groups. Buy gifts in multiples: if you're giving your daughter a doll, give a similar one for a same-age girl. Allow kids to choose presents for toy drives or church donations. Children should put as much thought into what they give as they do in what they give. They learn shopping skills, money math, generosity, unselfishness and empathy.

Encourage donations of money and time. Children should volunteer their efforts. That's giving too. Encourage them to choose one act of service for every holiday giving event they attend. If kids receive allowances, they should not to be greedy and keep it all for themselves. They should contribute some of it. This can start a life-long tradition of generosity. This author's oldest daughter began donating to St. Jude's Children's Hospital in kindergarten. The class did math problems in a school "math-a-thon" to raise money. 30 years later, she still supports the organization. Another child makes it a point to put cash in each Salvation Army bucket he sees. That habit began when he was two and was given money for the collection.

Host an Easter Bunny or Santa's toy shop and collect secondhand, recycled, refurbished toys. There is no shame in giving secondhand toys to kids in need, if you also gave your own children secondhand presents. It's a great way to save money plus it teaches children to "make it do, use it up, wear it out, make it last." So host a toy fix-up workshop. Before donating toys, make sure they are clean and in working order. Teach children how to repair broken parts, replace batteries and made sure all toys are properly assembled and in good working order. If toys are missing boxes, put parts in a zippered bag and write out instructions for use. Encourage unselfishness by modeling. Lead by example in sharing, caring and generosity.




Dos and Don'ts for Dealing with CSA in a school setting

 Hello my friends of the Omschool. Today's topic is for adults and parents only. The subject is sensitive and fraught with problems. I'm going to share do's and don'ts for dealing with CSA in a school setting. And let me just say that these are my own ideas and do not constitute legal advice. I did get some good feedback from Google Gemini AI. 

1) Do put students' safety first. Educators have a duty of care to students, to protect them. You don't need proof of abuse or CSA, but "reasonable cause to believe" is required. For this, visual cues such as behavior changes, abnormal withdrawal or aggression. Watch for health issues, frequent illnesses, poor hygiene, bruising, odd injuries. 

2) Do listen. And watch. Don't judge, correct, dismiss or direct. This should probably be first. But I put it second because, from my experience, a child rarely discloses CSA or abuse, especially if it is at the hands of trusted, liked authority figures. That's WHY so much abuse goes undetected for so long. 

3) Do document everything in a private timestamped log. Update it as needed. This can help protect you and your family as well as your students. 

4) Do not wait for proof. Teachers are mandatory reporters in cases of CSA, child abuse and neglect. If you wait for confirmation, the abuse will continue.  It's like city planner only putting up a stop sign after enough accidents have occurred. Do not wait for that. And yes, this is probably the most complicated part of the job description. 

5) Do report suspicions of peer-student abuse and CSA. Don't let professional loyalty, friendship, anything come before your legal duty of care to students. If the suspect is a colleague, reporting might even be more crucial because now so many other children are also at risk. 

6). Do report, don't investigate. Teachers and school staff are mandatory reporters of any suspicion or evidence of CSA. But we are not detectives or police officers. Our job is to communicate to the proper authorities, under the auspices of school administration usually. Educators must cooperate with authorities and leave the investigations to them. 

7) Do report up the chain of command UNLESS you have reason to believe that nothing will be done, or that your colleague will be sheltered. This does happen. School administrators aren't immune to covering up abuse any more that churches, workplaces, doctors, police or families . Again, you don't need proof they will disbelieve you. But you do need reasonable doubt. In that case, go directly to the police. But be careful. Whistle blower protection laws are in place but if the workplace is so toxic that it would keep silent on abuse, then you may not be safe. 

8) Do report to police or the state hotline, yourself. THIS IS A MUST COMPLY STEP. Google Gemini made an excellent point when reviewing this list that just reporting to the principal alone is not enough. Part of being a mandatory reporter is that the originator must report directly to authorities. It is a wrong assumption that just telling a supervisor fulfills the reporting duty. Plus, if there is a concern that the abuse will be ignored on a building or district level, a police report assures it won't be. 

9) Do get legal advice from a trusted professional. If you did not report to the principal, because you feared it would be ignored, best to have an advocate. Hopefully this won't be necessary. 

(For administrators) Do not ignore, "sit on", "vet" or "evaluate" reports, if you are on a leadership team. Don't "take into consideration" any personal feelings or what you think are "mitigating circumstances." Do not weigh the child's character against the teacher's reputation. That is not your call. Do not bring in the accused in for a conference. This constitutes warning them. Do not make excuses (his mother died recently). Don't pathologize. All this amounts to is suppressing evidence. Do call the police and then put the employee on administrative leave

10) Do not, I repeat do not confront the perpetrator. Do not warn them. Leave the confrontation to the school district and police. Once reported, stay out and stay quiet. This is the best way to keep everyone safe. Don't give any ammunition for reprisal. Tipping them off could lead to evidence tampering, hiding or , coaching the child to change stories to protect the reported perpetrators and fleeing with the child. 

11) Do familiarize yourself with FERPA (Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act). Do not disclose any personal or sensitive information unless directed to by investigative teams. And even then, be careful. Don't withhold or argue but do know the law. 

12) Do not disclose to the child involved that the perpetrator was reported or that there is an investigation, whether the child has reported abuse to you or you just suspect it. Very often, and I'm speaking from experience as a child in abusive situation and as a teacher, the child does not want to get the adult "in trouble." It is heartbreaking and another reason abuse flourishes unchecked. If she asks what you are going to do, say "I'm going to help you all I can." 

13) Do affirm the child for having the courage to speak up. This is very likely the hardest thing she has ever had to do and something no child should ever have to do. Let her know you hear and believe her. I've kept silent, since childhood, on inappropriate CSA behavior of a youth group leader, two pastors, a teacher and several older boys . And then when I did once tell, and was disbelieved, the shame was magnified.  Be the change so many of us traumatized kids needed. 

14) Do not disclose details to other students. Don't lie to any of them. Assure them that you will help all you can. Keep it simple. Sadly, the child reporting it is sometimes subjected to shame, ridicule, accusations of "showing off" or harassment, by other children, adults or other parents. In cases where the perpetrator is a beloved friend, staff member, etc, the risks are great. 

15) Do not discuss the case, the victim, the perpetrator or details of the investigation with ANYONE other than those you have reported to. All too often cases are compromised by loose lips. 

16) (In the case of staff abuse reports) Do pre-emptively draft a letter to parents, letting them know as soon as possible, that an incident occurred, that it is being dealt with and how. Do NOT wait for news sources or social media to pick it up. Parents have not only a right but a need to know if their child's safety may have been compromised. What they do not need, nor have a right to, are personal details of the specific case.  The notification should stay focused on the removal of the threat not any compromising details of the incident or victim. This meets FERPA compliancy plus transparency. 

17) Do address parent concerns, if applicable. Explain that while FERPA forbids you from disclosing personal details (name, date, location, type of abuse), your school is fully cooperating with authorities, exploring security protocols and putting safety of students first. ONLY if you can, allay fears that it didn't occur at school, if that has been proved. Here's a script to use with concerned parents (thanks again to Google Gemini).

The "Safety Pivot" Script for Parents

"I understand you are concerned about your child’s safety. While I am legally prohibited by FERPA and state confidentiality laws from discussing the details of any student or personnel matter, I can assure you that the individual in question is no longer on campus. Our school is cooperating fully with law enforcement, and we have [counselors/increased supervision] available for any student who needs support. If there is ever information that specifically pertains to your child’s safety, you will be contacted directly by the investigating authorities."

18) Do not give false assurances. Never give out opinion as fact.  "No your son was never in contact with Teacher A." or "I'm sure all is fine."  No you are not and it is far from fine with the terrified parents. Describe what steps are being taken to redress the situation (security cameras, hiring more staff) Let them know that the person in question, if a school employee is on administrative leave and/or is no longer in contact with students. HOWEVER

19) Do not answer specific questions about details of the case or situation. Not to other students, parents, friends, no one. Even if parents demand to know, them knowing will help no one and it is illegal and so very dangerous to the child involved. 

20) Do encourage parents to listen and watch for any problems from their student. Warn them against  giving the child too much information that will needlessly frighten her. If she asks, a simple "Teacher A has taken personal leave" should suffice. Suggest that if their student seems to be okay, proceed, cautiously, with that. But keep listening. 

21 ) Do let parents be the ones to decide if they will ask their children about any experiences. This isn't in school purview. Suggest that, if asking other children about Teacher A, avoid leading questions. This isn't about proving the teacher guilty or innocent. It's about helping children process horrific situations. 

22) Do assemble a trauma team. Do not have a big student meeting, assembly, to discuss what happened. Neither hide nor highlight it. Trust students to  know if they need to discuss what happened with a professional. If they seem sad, withdrawn or struggling, reach out for help on their behalf. 

23) Do carry on as usual in the classroom. Deal with what happened as needed but don't let the reprehensible actions of one person, derail the good things that are happening. Make resources available and move on  This is best for students, families, everyone. And almost always, it's what children want too. Focus on keeping to the schedule, maintaining positive energy and moving forward. 

24) Do protect the privacy if the innocent and the guilty. This one was difficult for me. My first response was that the guilty deserved no privacy. Be that as it may, the victim does and by gossiping about the perpetrator, you are logically drawing attention, speculation, posturing, etc, about the victim as well. And the perpetrator has family members to consider too, especially if there are children involved. No one should add any more to their suffering. 

25) Do not comment at all on the employee if it was a school employee. Don't make excuses or character assassinate. Two reasons: if the accused is guilty, ranting about it will help no one. Two, innocent people do get accused. If so, comments could be seen as slander/defamation of character. Just concentrate on your students. 

26) Don't discuss it at home or anywhere. If parents are told only just so much, the general public, with no vested interest, is certainly owed no explanation. Just let the authorities do their job. 

27) Do not post about any specific incidents, active cases or identifying victim or perpetrator details online, particularly not on social media. Period. Not after and certainly not before reporting. Do not speculate nor comment on any posted content regarding any specific situation. Social media threads are mostly not policed and can get very ugly and vitriolic. Do not engage in them. This goes beyond unprofessional. It could cost you your job or teaching license. 

In summary, Here's a quick checklist to go through in the first 10 minutes of disclosure. 

Believe and Reassure (the student)

Stop the questioning (don't investigate).

Call the Hotline/Police.

Notify Admin (unless they are the suspect).

Document everything. 

And going forward, if a staffer was involved, staff should have refresher training is spotting CSA/ abuse within a workplace. One suspicion or quirky thing does not a perpetrator make. But a pattern of troubling behaviors is different. Very often, in cases I've read, the perpetrator was giving out red flags right and left. Multiple students had reported off, inappropriate behavior. Repeatedly, the staff member was shunted between buildings instead of being confronted. Let's stop these dangerous habits so more kids aren't CSA statistics. 




Free printable Easter coloring pages, crafts, games and party activities

Easter is the highest season in the Christian church and the second largest national holiday in most countries. Easter has taken on a secular side. If you celebrate Easter with eggs, bunnies and Easter baskets here are free printable Easter crafts and activities. Get free printable Easter coloring pages, greeting cards, Easter party games, Easter craft projects, printable Easter baskets, Easter bunny coloring pages, puzzles, mazes, plus a whole lot more. You can print Easter eggs, bunnies, baby animals and cute spring and Easter decorations.

DLTK is always a great resource for educational holiday activities for kids. DLTK has free printable Easter crafts. Easter bunny memory games, Easter bookmarks, Easter party decorations and place cards, Easter greeting cards, dominoes, chore charts, calendars, Easter bingo cards, three Easter mini-books to color, Easter treat holders, Easter worksheets and more.

No article about free printable holiday crafts is complete without a mention of Crayola Get free printable Easter crafts and art projects. Print holiday crafts, word searches, puzzles for Easter. Get free printable Easter baskets, games, greeting cards, puzzles, coloring pages, color your own photo frames and (my favorite kids game) connect the dots. Be sure to bookmark and visit often.

First School has a great assortment of free printable religious and secular Easter crafts for kids. There are stained glass window Easter coloring pages, Easter egg shaped greeting cards. First school has free printable animal craft projects: baby chick and chicken, donkey for Palm Sunday, Easter bunny rabbit, lambs, ducks and geese. These are only a few of the free printable Easter crafts, spring crafts, lessons and activities. Be sure to check out First School for a complete, nicely organized website.

Super Coloring features hundreds of free printable Easter coloring pages including the popular adult coloring pages. These are more intricate and challenging than children's coloring pages. But there are plenty of those too! There are even Disney Easter coloring pages featuring Mickey Mouse and friends. There's a SpongeBob coloring page as well. 

The Toymaker may not have quite as many free printable Easter crafts but what she has are utterly unique. The Toymaker specializes in handmade holiday crafts with an old world Euro flavor. Her free printable vintage Easter crafts feature spectacularly hand-drawn, watercolor art work. Print Easter bunny greeting cards and a 3D Easter bunny paper model. The sweet little Easter baskets will satisfy a lover of Art Deco and the inner child. Little kids will like making Easter baskets to collect their eggs and candy too. 

Mystery Story Writing Prompts and Horror Fiction Story Starters for creative writing lesson plans


 "It was a dark and stormy night..."--remember Snoopy's famous one-liner that was going to begin his epic, but ever-elusive mystery story? Perhaps you know how Snoopy feels, perched atop his doghouse, typewriter silent, creative juices dried up. You've got that mystery story brewing in your brain. But where to begin? Well, my friends of the Omschool, here are mystery story writing prompts and suspense and horror fiction story starters to get you out of the doghouse and writing those mystery stories. 

Teachers and homeschool parents, use these for creative writing lessons for Writers Workshop activities, National Reading Month (March) and NaNoWriMo (November). Write out mystery story writing prompts on the board and let students go writing their works of horror fiction. And now for the mystery and horror fiction creative writing lesson plans. 

Horror Fiction Writing Prompt: What was in the Wishing Well "I hated drawing water from the dank, bug-infested well house to begin with. When the bucket came up heavier and more slowly than usual, I sensed that something was wrong. But I was totally unprepared for what followed...

Mystery story writing prompts: The Curio Shop Enigma "I hadn't remembered seeing the old curio shop on that street before, but the elderly gent was outside to peddle his wares and beckoned me in. When I returned the next day with my brother, shop and shopkeeper had gone. We asked an old-timer passing by where it was. 'That shop?' he declared, "why it ain't been around for 50 years!" 

Mystery story starters: The Smell in the Attic "We always kept the attic trap door locked and no one ever went up there. One day as I passed, I smelled an oddly familiar smell, that I hadn't smelled since I was little. The odor got stronger, until finally I opened the door. As I went up the rickety steps, I got the shock of my life. 

Mystery story starters: The Missing Picture Puzzle "I loved to look through our old family photos. One day, I noticed that a certain picture had been removed, no, not just removed, but viciously hacked out of the album. I asked the whole family and no one seemed to have taken it. Was someone hiding something?" 

Horror fiction scary story starters: The Walled-Up Room "Tearing down a wall to build an addition to our home, I discovered a small narrow room hidden between the walls. It appeared to have been boarded up decades ago and what was in it gave me the fright of my life."

Horror genre creative writing lessons: The Thing in the Pond "For years, I've visited a pond in the woods near our house. Recently I saw something in the bottom. And it was more than sand, rocks and a few fish and turtles. Something much, much more..." 

Mystery story starters and writing prompts: The Not-So- Prank Caller "We thought the odd phone calls were just pranks by some local kids. Until the caller asked me something really creepy. 'Did anybody ever find where you buried the body?"

Mystery story starters: The Letter from Yesterday "The envelope that came in the mail looked really elegant and I was hoping that it was an invitation to a party. It was an invitation...for a party dated, July 30, 1927." 

Mystery story writing prompts for creative writing lessons: The Long-Gone Boy "We were all playing in our fort by the creek. A tall thin boy with dark eyes and long hair appeared silently from the woods. He came out every day for two weeks but he never said a word. Then he disappeared again, but returned with something terrifying..." 

Horror genre scary story starters: What the Cat Brought Home "My cat likes to bring home an odd assortment of creatures. Not that he kills them. I think they are his friends. One day the cat brought home a "friend" the likes of which I've never seen before in my life and I doubt that I ever will again." 

You can take these mystery story starters in any direction you want. It might be that what appears so creepy turns out to have a logical if strange explanation. The thing in the pond, for example might look like a dead body but turn out to be a statue thrown there because it showed signs of being alive. Or, what seems harmless, might be extremely terrifying and dangerous. It might be supernatural or natural. The thing in the well might be a ghostly specter or an unusual species, never seen in that area. 

The important thing is to avoid overused themes and to be as creative as possible. The Book Seller's Enigma is not an unusual plot device. But you might use it to write a story in the style of Three Investigators or M.R. James in which the shop had been entirely recreated for the character to see and then torn down the next day. The "old-timer" doesn't just happen to be there. He's planted to confuse, to cover up an illegal operation in stolen artifacts. Or, like an M.R. James story, it has a sinister and ghostly explanation. 

It's okay to emulate other authors, especially older ones, but don't plagiarize. And don't just change names and a few detail. That's plagiarizing too in that you're stealing intellectual property rights to the idea. To emulate is the write in the style of, not the content of an author. 

Picture is our cat Mordecai who would bring home friends if he was allowed outside.