Age Range

3-10 years old

Duration

20 minutes

Difficulty Level

Category

Habits

Courtesy Language Practice

Learn and use polite words and phrases consistently

Habits0

Tags

PolitenessLanguageSocialzero-prephomeindoor

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Activity Steps

1

Teach Core Courtesy Words and Phrases

Approx. 5 min

Introduce the magic words of courtesy: 'Please' (when asking for something), 'Thank you' (when someone helps or gives you something), 'You're welcome' (responding to thanks), 'Excuse me' (getting attention politely or after burping/sneezing), 'I'm sorry' (when you make a mistake or hurt someone), and 'May I' (asking permission). For each word, explain when to use it and why it matters. 'Please' shows respect instead of demanding. 'Thank you' shows you appreciate others' help. 'Excuse me' acknowledges you're interrupting or did something rude. Model each phrase: 'Watch me ask politely: May I please have a snack?' Then have your child practice saying them. Write the words on a poster or list so they're visible. Emphasize that using these words makes people happy to help you and like being around you.

💡 Tips

  • Create a 'magic words' poster with pictures for each word so young kids remember visual cues
  • Use a 'politeness jar'—kids earn a token each time they use courtesy words unprompted, trade for small rewards
2

Practice in Role-Play Scenarios

Approx. 5 min

Set up practice situations where your child uses courtesy language. You play different roles: a store clerk, a friend, a teacher, a family member. Scenario 1: 'You want a cookie. Ask me politely.' They say: 'May I please have a cookie?' You respond positively. Scenario 2: 'I just gave you a gift. What do you say?' They say: 'Thank you!' Scenario 3: 'You accidentally bumped into me. What do you say?' They say: 'Excuse me' or 'I'm sorry.' Do 5-10 quick scenarios covering different courtesy words. Switch roles—you be the kid asking rudely, they correct you: 'No, you should say please!' This reinforces the lesson. Make it playful and fun, not a drill. Laugh together when practicing. The goal is muscle memory—saying courtesy words without thinking.

💡 Tips

  • Use silly exaggerated scenarios to make practice fun: 'Ask the stuffed bear for his honey politely!'
  • Reverse roles where you model rude behavior and let your child correct you—empowering and educational
3

Use Courtesy Language in Real Situations Today

Approx. 5 min

Now apply courtesy language in actual daily life. Throughout the day, create opportunities for your child to use polite words naturally: asking for meals, requesting help, receiving things, interacting with siblings, talking to store clerks or neighbors. Before each interaction, whisper a quick reminder if needed: 'Remember to say please.' After they use courtesy words successfully, praise them: 'I heard you say thank you—great job!' If they forget in the moment, gently prompt: 'How can you ask more politely?' and let them try again. Don't let rudeness slide—every interaction is practice. By day's end, your child should have used courtesy words 10-20 times in real situations. This moves politeness from abstract lesson to lived habit.

💡 Tips

  • Create a 'courtesy challenge': count how many times you use magic words in one day—make it a game
  • Praise siblings or friends who use courtesy language in front of your child—peer modeling is powerful
4

Give Positive Reinforcement and Feedback

Approx. 4 min

End the day with a reflection session. Praise your child's courtesy: 'I noticed you said please and thank you at dinner without being reminded. I'm so proud!' Point out specific moments: 'When you thanked the store clerk, did you see how she smiled? That's because your politeness made her day better.' Discuss how being polite felt: 'Was it easy or hard? Did people treat you nicely when you were polite?' Reinforce that courtesy isn't just a rule—it's a tool that makes life better. Give gentle feedback on areas to improve: 'You're doing great with please, but let's work on remembering thank you tomorrow.' Use a reward system if helpful: stickers on a chart for each day of consistent courtesy, trade for a small privilege when full. Celebrate progress, not perfection.

💡 Tips

  • Keep a 'politeness journal' where your child draws or writes about times they used courtesy words and what happened
  • Use a marble jar: add a marble each time you catch courtesy, remove one for rudeness—visual progress tracker
5

Make Politeness a Lifelong Family Habit

Approx. 1 min

Commit to ongoing courtesy language practice. Make it non-negotiable in your home: polite words aren't optional, they're how this family communicates. Model it relentlessly. When your child forgets, calmly remind: 'What's the polite way to ask?' Eventually, prompts won't be needed—it'll be automatic. Expand courtesy as your child grows: 'please' and 'thank you' for young kids, then add 'pardon me,' 'excuse me for interrupting,' 'I appreciate your help,' and 'no thank you' (polite refusal). Teach phone manners, table manners, and respectful disagreement. Courtesy becomes a mindset, not just specific words. Reinforce that being polite doesn't mean being a doormat—you can be assertive and polite simultaneously. Over years, these habits create a respectful, kind person who others enjoy being around.

💡 Tips

  • Revisit courtesy practice every few months with a 'manners refresher day' to reinforce habits
  • Model apologizing when you're rude or impatient—shows that courtesy is for everyone, always

Preparation

Ensure enough time to complete the activity

Prepare required materials and tools

Choose appropriate environment and venue

Safety Tips

Please ensure activities are conducted under adult supervision and pay attention to safety.