The Whole-Brain Child
Daniel J. Siegel & Tina Payne Bryson
12 strategies grounded in brain science for helping young children handle big feelings and difficult moments.
View on Amazon →Before students can manage emotions, they need words for them. Expanding their emotions vocabulary beyond 'happy,' 'sad,' and 'mad' is one of the highest-leverage SEL investments you can make.
Naming an emotion activates the prefrontal cortex — the area responsible for regulation — and reduces activity in the amygdala's threat-response system. This neurological process, documented by Lieberman et al. (2007) in a study using fMRI, is sometimes called "affect labeling." Put simply: when we name feelings, we calm them. Teaching students a rich emotions vocabulary is therefore not just a social nicety — it is a regulation strategy with neurological backing.
K-3 students typically start with a limited vocabulary: happy, sad, mad, scared. Expanding this vocabulary to include frustrated, disappointed, nervous, embarrassed, proud, excited, confused, jealous, and overwhelmed gives students tools to communicate and regulate more precisely.
Introduce one emotion each week. Post the word with an image (a face or cartoon). Discuss: What does it feel like in your body? When do you feel this way? What helps when you feel this way? Use it in context throughout the week.
Picture books are the most powerful tool for emotions vocabulary in K-3. Read stories with emotionally complex characters. Stop and ask: "How does she feel right now? How do you know? Have you ever felt that way?" Books create emotional safe space to explore feelings.
Post a classroom feelings chart with faces and words. During morning meeting, ask students to point to how they're feeling. Normalize all emotions: "All feelings are okay. What we do with our feelings is what we practice."
Students act out an emotion (without words) while classmates guess. This builds identification skills and creates shared reference points for talking about feelings.
Help students connect emotions to body sensations: "When I'm nervous, my stomach feels fluttery. When I'm frustrated, my face gets hot. When I'm happy, I feel light." This interoceptive awareness deepens self-knowledge.
Happy, sad, angry/mad, scared, surprised, disgusted, embarrassed, proud, frustrated, calm, worried, excited, confused
Disappointed, jealous, nervous, overwhelmed, grateful, lonely, hopeful, humiliated, anxious, determined, content, regretful, curious, bored, nostalgic
Children who can only name "happy," "sad," "mad," and "scared" have a limited emotional toolkit. They may feel frustrated but call it "mad," which leads to responses designed for anger rather than frustration. Expanding emotional vocabulary — introducing words like frustrated, nervous, proud, embarrassed, disappointed, excited, grateful, curious, overwhelmed, relieved — gives students more precise tools for communicating their inner experience. The Zones of Regulation framework and the Feelings Wheel are both useful classroom tools for visually representing the spectrum of emotions beyond the basic four. Display a reference chart at eye level and explicitly point to it during read-alouds, class discussions, and SEL lessons. Over time, students start using the expanded vocabulary unprompted.
Children's literature is one of the most effective vehicles for emotional vocabulary instruction because emotions are shown in context — through character actions, facial expressions, and consequences — rather than defined abstractly. During and after read-alouds, make feelings vocabulary explicit: "The character said she felt 'embarrassed' when that happened. Has anyone felt embarrassed before? What does that feel like in your body?" Connecting the word to a physical sensation (butterflies in your stomach, face getting hot, wanting to hide) helps students recognize the emotion in themselves. Books that feature complex, nuanced emotional experiences — not just resolution stories — are especially valuable.
The most powerful vocabulary instruction in a classroom happens through teacher modeling. When you name your own emotions specifically — "I'm feeling a little frustrated right now because our schedule got disrupted, but I'm going to take a breath and refocus" — you demonstrate that adults have complex emotions, that it's safe to name them, and that there are constructive ways to respond to them. Students who observe this modeling regularly develop both the vocabulary and the self-regulation strategy embedded in the example. Your own emotional language is the most authentic and high-frequency emotional vocabulary instruction your students receive.
Teacher-tested books and classroom supplies we recommend for this topic. Explore the full list on our Recommended Resources page.
Daniel J. Siegel & Tina Payne Bryson
12 strategies grounded in brain science for helping young children handle big feelings and difficult moments.
View on Amazon →Anna Llenas
A beloved picture book that helps young children name and sort their emotions — perfect for a feelings read-aloud.
View on Amazon →Carol McCloud
The bucket-filling metaphor that teaches kindness and empathy — a classroom-community staple for K-3.
View on Amazon →Patrice Karst
A gentle read-aloud about connection that comforts children through separation, big worries, and loss.
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