A vibrant photo book by Red-Green Behavior Therapy to help children identify and express emotions, featuring real faces showing angry, happy, excited feelings. Perfect book about emotions for kids 3-8.
$18.00
Description
Specs
The Face That Says It All
There's that moment every parent and teacher knows—your child is clearly feeling something big, but they're stuck. The tears, the tantrum, the shutdown... and when you ask what’s wrong, all they can say is, "I don't know".Maybe your preschooler melts down when frustrated but can't find words for that burning feeling inside. Perhaps your student acts out when overwhelmed but has no language for the emotional storm brewing. You know they need to express their feelings, but how do you teach them to recognize emotions they can't even name?
Bridge to Emotional Awareness
The opposite of abstract, this picture book about feelings captures the subtle details that make feelings recognizable: the furrowed brow of concentration, the sparkle in excited eyes, the slumped shoulders of disappointment. When children see authentic emotional expressions, they develop the visual vocabulary needed for emotional intelligence.Real photographs paired with clever rhymes create an engaging experience that children actually remember. The familiar scenarios—playground moments, family interactions, everyday situations—help kids recognize these same emotions in their own lives.
Use this book as:
A visual dictionary of feelings that kids can reference independently
A conversation starter for discussing emotional experiences
A tool for helping children express emotions they previously couldn't name
A bridge between feeling overwhelmed and finding the right words
Emotional education resource for:
parents helping children process the emotions of their day while building emotional awareness for tomorrow.
teachers seeking social emotional learning materials for building emotional intelligence
therapists incorporating books about expressing emotions for kids who struggle with communication
Face Me: Feelings Through Photos makes the mystery of emotions into something children can see, recognize, and finally express.
• 13 page hardcover book
• Ages: 3-10
Description
The Face That Says It All
There’s that moment every parent and teacher knows—your child is clearly feeling something big, but they’re stuck. The tears, the tantrum, the shutdown… and when you ask what’s wrong, all they can say is, “I don’t know”.Maybe your preschooler melts down when frustrated but can’t find words for that burning feeling inside. Perhaps your student acts out when overwhelmed but has no language for the emotional storm brewing. You know they need to express their feelings, but how do you teach them to recognize emotions they can’t even name?
Bridge to Emotional Awareness
The opposite of abstract, this picture book about feelings captures the subtle details that make feelings recognizable: the furrowed brow of concentration, the sparkle in excited eyes, the slumped shoulders of disappointment. When children see authentic emotional expressions, they develop the visual vocabulary needed for emotional intelligence.Real photographs paired with clever rhymes create an engaging experience that children actually remember. The familiar scenarios—playground moments, family interactions, everyday situations—help kids recognize these same emotions in their own lives.
Use this book as:
A visual dictionary of feelings that kids can reference independently
A conversation starter for discussing emotional experiences
A tool for helping children express emotions they previously couldn’t name
A bridge between feeling overwhelmed and finding the right words
Emotional education resource for:
parents helping children process the emotions of their day while building emotional awareness for tomorrow.
teachers seeking social emotional learning materials for building emotional intelligence
therapists incorporating books about expressing emotions for kids who struggle with communication
Face Me: Feelings Through Photos makes the mystery of emotions into something children can see, recognize, and finally express.