Activity
Morning Greeting Circle
Children practice polite greetings and following a friendly direction as they start the day together with an adult leader.
Ages 36–60 months
Supports this milestone
- engages in prosocial and cooperative behavior with adults. — Head Start ELOF
Materials
- A greeting chart with picture choices (wave, high five, handshake, fist bump)
- Optional soft puppet or talking object passed around the circle
Steps
- Open with a shared song or chant so children know the routine has begun.
- Greet the first child warmly by name and offer a greeting choice from the chart.
- Have the child greet the adult and the next child back, then pass the turn around the circle.
- Give one simple group direction (such as "show me listening ears") and notice children who follow it.
- Close by thanking the group for their kind greetings and for following along.
Variations
- Let a child be the "greeter leader" who chooses the day's greeting for everyone.
- Add greetings in different languages families speak at home.
Differentiation
- Offer a picture card to point to for children who are not yet speaking greetings.
- Keep waits short and seat restless children near the adult for support.
Accessibility
- Pair every spoken cue with a gesture or picture and allow extra processing time.
Safety
- Offer no-touch greeting options so children are never required to make physical contact.
Practices these skills
Evidence
- Head Start Early Learning Outcomes Framework (ELOF) — U.S. Office of Head Start · 2015 · U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Early Atlas