Healthy relationships
Listening to feelings
Bullying
Assertive skills
about the features of positive healthy friendships such as mutual respect, trust and sharing interests
strategies to build positive friendships
how to seek support with relationships if they feel lonely or excluded
how to communicate respectfully with friends when using digital devices
how knowing someone online differs from knowing someone face to face and that there are risks in communicating with someone they don’t know
what to do or whom to tell if they are worried about any contact online
Demonstrate strategies for working on a collaborative task;
Define successful qualities of teamwork and collaboration.
Explain what we mean by a ‘positive, healthy relationship’;
Describe some of the qualities that they admire in others.
Recognise that there are times when they might need to say 'no' to a friend;
Describe appropriate assertive strategies for saying 'no' to a friend.
Describe 'good' and 'not so good' feelings and how feelings can affect our physical state;
Explain how different words can express the intensity of feelings.
Identify a wide range of feelings;
Recognise that different people can have different feelings in the same situation;
Explain how feelings can be linked to physical state.
Give examples of strategies to respond to being bullied, including what people can do and say;
Understand and give examples of who or where pressure to behave in an unhealthy, unacceptable or risky way might come from.
Recognising and celebrating difference (including religions and cultural difference)
Understanding and challenging stereotypes
Define the terms 'negotiation' and 'compromise';
Understand the need to manage conflict or differences and suggest ways of doing this, through negotiation and compromise.
List some of the ways that people are different to each other (including differences of race, gender, religion);
Recognise potential consequences of aggressive behaviour;
Suggest strategies for dealing with someone who is behaving aggressively.
List some of the ways in which people are different to each other (including ethnicity, gender, religious beliefs, customs and festivals);
Define the word respect and demonstrate ways of showing respect to others' differences.
Recognise that they have different types of relationships with people they know (e.g. close family, wider family, friends, acquaintances);
Give examples of features of these different types of relationships, including how they influence what is shared. Adoption mentioned - cohort sensitivity maybe required.
Understand that they have the right to protect their personal body space;
Recognise how others' non-verbal signals indicate how they feel when people are close to their body space;
Suggest people they can talk to if they feel uncomfortable with other people's actions towards them.