Did you forget about the faculty meeting this morning? Did you walk in to discover your heater isnât working? Are you trying to wrap your head around how youâll get another student in your fifth period, bringing your total to 39 students? Donât worry. These teacher stories about student kindness will fix all of that.
(OK, maybe they wonâtâbut theyâll definitely warm your heart.)
With all the challenges that teachers are expected to manage and the daily fires we put out, itâs easy to miss the small victories of generosity and compassion. Today, weâre sharing the top stories of student kindness teachers have had the privilege to observe. From bug crews to wish granters, these stories remind us that kindness knows no age limit.
Have some Kleenex handy, folks!
âMy 10th grade students had to create a presentation on an enduring issue.â
âOne of my students chose mental health and revealed that he struggles with his own mental health. He started to get emotional and several students stood up, walked right to him, and hugged him. And one by one, most of my students got up and they all huddled around him just embracing one another. I cried when it happened and Iâm tearing up as I write it now. An act of student kindness, a gesture of compassion ⊠the world needs more of this.â
âDayna F.
âWhen we have someone absent, Iâve seen my students pull out that peerâs notebook and take notes or glue in anchor charts so when they come back they can pick up right where we are.â
âThey love helping their peers.â
âAshleigh R.
âA couple of weeks ago during reading groups, one of my first grade boys leaned over to another boy and said, âMâ, I like having you as a friend. The world needs a friend like you.ââÂ
âThis same little guy stopped in the hallway a few weeks ago because he saw a kindergartner struggling to get ready for recess, so he helped the kindergartner zip up his coat and waited to walk out to recess with him.â
âMiranda S.
âWe had a student rejoin our class after being removed from his class due to his extreme behavior.â
âI let my class know who was joining us so they werenât shocked, and we talked about how everyone deserves a chance to be in a place where they are loved and can learn, and how we could be role models to show him what good choices look and sound like. The next day on his desk was a note and some candy from a student, welcoming him to our class. It made my heart melt.â
âLizzie T.
âI have a âbug crewâ that takes the big spiders and critters back out.â
âSome classmates are very scared so then everyone can concentrate on learning.â
âLyla H.
âIn my freshman leadership class, students work on public speaking.â
âTheir first speech is a 2-to-3-minute speech simply telling the class about themselves. Most of them do an autobiographical speech, or an embarrassing moment, or a great trip they took. Sometimes a student gets very personal. As you can imagine, it is difficult for these students to make it through their speeches and difficult for others to hear. There were times when we all cried. I was never so proud as when I saw my students quietly get up to comfort, hold, and just be there for a fellow student.â
âSandi E.
âMy brother, age 37, passed away in May 1992.â
âMy students had been writing him letters, creating cards for him, sang Happy Birthday to him on his birthday. When I announced that he had passed away, and my voice cracked, one boy, Gary, called out group hug. The class of 32 fourth graders came up to me and we all hugged for a while. A perfect moment.â
âMelody H.
âAt the end of last year, a bunch of students had bought âlunch with the teacher.'â
âOne student used all his Eagle bucks to buy the privilege for the kids who didnât have enough so the whole class could eat together in the classroom. (With me!)â
âChristine F.
âMany years ago I was blessed with the opportunity to teach the most extraordinary class of students I fondly referred to as my Peaches.â
âOne day during lunch, one of my students quietly brought a backpack filled with clothing and another backpack filled with school supplies and snacks ⊠to share with a student in need. I will never forget the kindness and generosity of this student and his family, for all of my life.â
âMarylouise A.
âI have students who will ask if they can fill in their classmateâs guided notes as we do them in class because that classmate has gone to the bathroom.â
âA lot of the time, these are kids who donât even hang out with each other outside of class. Theyâre just being kind.â
âCarmen G.
âMy student helped one of our Life Skills students check out a library book.â
âThen he and a group of friends sat around and read to him. The smile on the studentâs face was priceless!â
âLinda B.
âThe brother of one of my students was diagnosed with a serious, degenerative illness.â
âThe rest of the class got together to fundraise money for the whole family to go on his dream trip to Disney World before his condition deteriorated and prevented him from going.â
âAnita A.
See? Didnât these stories of student kindness make you forget you missed the faculty meeting this morning?
Our job here is done.