1 / 14

Your Friendships

Your Friendships. G11 HECMA Term 2 Lesson 3. Learning Objectives. Explain why friends are important. Identify the characteristics of a good friendship Recognize ways to keep friendships strong Describe ways to resist peer pressure. Friends A re Important.

lyndon
Télécharger la présentation

Your Friendships

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. YourFriendships G11 HECMA Term 2 Lesson 3

  2. Learning Objectives • Explain why friends are important. • Identify the characteristics of a good friendship • Recognize ways to keep friendships strong • Describe ways to resist peer pressure

  3. Friends Are Important • A friendship is a relationship with someone you know, trust and regard with affection. • Friends are usually people who live near you and have the same interests as you. • Strong friendships are important for your social health.

  4. Friends Are Important • Friendships can take time to develop. • Some people have one close friend, others have many close friends. • Some people have acquaintances– this is someone you see occasionally and know casually. • Friendships let you share your life (the good and bad) with people you know well.

  5. Traits of a Good Friend Friendship is a very important relationship. Most friendships have the following qualities: • Trust– being open and honest • Care– listening, understanding and accepting • Respect – treat each other as equals • Loyalty – Stay together no matter what, support and forgive

  6. Building Friendships • Some people make friends easily, while others find it difficult. • Making friends can be easier when you join groups who have similar interests to you. • Try a sports team or club to meet people

  7. Building Friendships • Other ways you can build friendships: • Spend more time with your friends • Communicate openly • Be there when your friends need help • Encourage your friends to reach their goals • Be tolerant – this means accepting people as they are, no matter their race or culture

  8. Knowing When to Compromise • Sometimes you may have disagreements with your friends and sometimes it is hard to find a solution. • When disagreements happen, friends are willing to compromise. • Compromise is when both sides give up something in order to reach a solution.

  9. Knowing When to Compromise • Compromise is the best answer for many disagreements, but sometimes it is not the best choice.

  10. Peer Pressure • Most of your friends are your peers. This means they are people close to you in age who you like a lot. • Teens can worry about what their peers think of them, and your peers opinions can affect how you act. • This is called Peer Pressure – it means the influence that your peer group has on you

  11. Negative Peer Pressure • Friends should not pressure you to do something that is unhealthy or unsafe. • For example – Friends should not pressure you to use tobacco, ask to break rules or copy homework. • Negative peer pressure can also be name calling, teasing, threats, bribes.

  12. Negative Peer Pressure • You can learn to recognize negative peer pressure by using the H.E.L.P criteria. H – Healthful E – Ethical L – Legal P – Parent approval • If your friends are asking you to do something that doesn’t fit the criteria – DON’T GO ALONG!

  13. Positive Peer Pressure • Your friends can give positive peer pressure when they suggest you do the right thing. • For example – The may encourage you to study more, join a club or volunteer for a group. • Positive peer pressure can be good for you – it can improve your health and help you feel better about yourself.

More Related