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Stories About Kindness for Kids โ€” Generate & Listen

Kindness stories show children the power of small, caring actions. Research from the University of British Columbia shows that children who practice kindness experience greater happiness and peer acceptance.

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Why Kindness Stories Matter

Dr. Kimberly Schonert-Reichl at the University of British Columbia found that children who regularly practice acts of kindness show increased well-being, peer acceptance, and prosocial behavior.

A Story About Kindness

The Kindness Jar

Ms. Parker's class had a problem. Nobody was talking to the new girl, Anna. So Ms. Parker brought in an empty glass jar. 'Every time someone does something kind,' she said, 'we add a marble. When the jar is full, the whole class gets a pizza party.' The first marble came from Ryan, who shared his crayons with Anna. The second from Mia, who sat with her at lunch. The third from Dev, who helped her find the library. But then something unexpected happened. The marbles started appearing faster. Not because kids wanted pizza โ€” but because they noticed that kindness felt good. Really good. Anna added a marble when she helped Ryan with math. She added another when she told Mia her drawing was beautiful. The jar filled up in two weeks instead of two months. At the pizza party, Ms. Parker asked, 'What did you learn?' Anna raised her hand. 'That kindness is like a boomerang. You throw it out, and it always comes back.'

Discussion Questions for Parents

After reading a kindness story, try asking your child:

  • How did the character show kindness in the story?
  • Can you think of a time someone was kind to you?
  • What's one kind thing you could do tomorrow?
  • Why do you think being kind makes people feel good?

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