Find Your Why: Self-Discovery & Purpose Worksheets | SEL Activities

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Find Your Why: Self-Discovery & Purpose Worksheets | SEL Activities

⭐ After graduation, some students can tell you exactly what they want to do. To be honest, it's okay that most people can't. However, it is beneficial to allow them time to genuinely consider it before life compels them to ask.
This worksheet set is intended for that purpose.
These exercises guide students through the kind of introspection that is uncommon during a typical class period: What genuinely matters to you? How do you get out of bed? What kind of person are you attempting to develop into? The true question, not the abstract, essay-prompted variant.

The type that requires several attempts to provide a good response.

The pack is suitable for upper elementary through middle school and works well in counseling sessions, advisory times, life skills classes, or any SEL block where you want students to do more than just fill in the spaces. The prompts are intended to progress from journaling to practical decision-making practice, and from values inquiry to goal-setting. Not only do students determine what important to them, but they also begin to devise solutions.

What's included is as follows:

Questions for reflection that go beyond simple responses
Setting goals that are connected to one's values rather than just academic achievements
For children who require structure before they can open themselves, journaling prompts
Activities for exploring values
Life-mapping and visualization tasks
Exercises for motivation and purpose

A few things to be aware of: these are not worksheets that you distribute and gather. They serve as discussion starters. In small groups, one-on-ones, or simply between a student and their journal, the reflection questions in particular often spark conversation. That's intentional.
When you're trying to establish classroom culture at the beginning of a semester or when students feel stuck in the middle of the year, this works effectively. For older kids who need to make the connection between their "why" and what follows next, it also works well with college and career readiness programs.

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