🎨 Kindness Fortune Teller 🎨

Building Your Kindness Toolkit Through Origami
📅 Origami Day – November 11 💝 Kindness Week 🎯 K-5th Grade ⏱️ 30-40 minutes

Learning Objectives

  • Develop practical life skills
  • Practice fine motor skills
  • Build communication skills
  • Learn kindness as action

Materials Needed

  • 8.5″ x 8.5″ square paper
  • Markers or crayons
  • Origami instructions
  • Optional: colored paper

Life Skills Focus

  • Appreciation & gratitude
  • Active listening
  • Cooperation & sharing
  • Inclusive behavior

Teacher Resources

  • Family friendly instructions for Kindness Fortune Teller
  • Discussion prompts
  • Parent communication guide
📥 Download All Resources (PDF)

📹 Instructional Videos by Nikita Tse

💡 Interactive Videos: These videos automatically pause at each step so you can follow along at your own pace. Press the play button to continue to the next step.

1

How to Fold Your Fortune Teller

Follow along as Nikita demonstrates the basic origami fortune teller fold

2

Decorating & Adding Your Kindness Skills

Learn how to personalize your fortune teller with hearts, numbers, and kindness prompts

3

How to Play & Practice Kindness

Nikita shows you how to use your fortune teller and put your kindness skills into action

💝 The 8 Kindness Skills

These are the life skills students will write inside their fortune tellers. Each skill is actionable and can be practiced immediately!

❤️
💙
💚
💛
1

Say something nice about a friend

2

Help a friend

3

Share with friends

4

Use nice words

5

Make a thank you card

6

Say thank you

7

Ask someone to play

8

Listen to friends

📝 Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Fold Your Fortune Teller – Follow Video 1 with Nikita to create the basic origami shape
  2. Decorate the Outside – Draw or color four hearts (red, blue, green, yellow) on the outer flaps
  3. Write Numbers 1-8 – On the inner triangles, write the numbers 1 through 8
  4. Add Kindness Skills – Lift each flap and write one kindness skill underneath. Use the age-appropriate language from the toggle above (K-1, 2-3, or 4-5).
  5. Practice Using It – Follow Video 3 to learn how to play and share kindness with friends
💡 Teacher Tip: For younger students (K-1st), use simpler language like “Say something nice” or “Help a friend.” Pre-write the skills on the board or provide a reference sheet. Older students (2nd-5th) can handle more complex language and may brainstorm additional kindness skills that matter to their classroom community. Use the toggle above to select age-appropriate wording!
🏠 Family Tip: Make this craft together as a family! When your child receives a “kindness fortune,” help them act on it immediately. If they get “Thank someone who helps you,” they can thank you for crafting together!

🚀 Extensions & Activities

🎯 Kindness Challenge

Students must complete the skill they receive by the end of the day and report back on what happened.

📊 Classroom Management Tool

Create a “Kindness Skills in Action” board where students can record which skills they practiced each day.

✍️ Writing Connection

Have students journal about which kindness skill felt easiest/hardest and why. Discuss as a class.

🎨 Personalize It

Encourage older students to create their own kindness prompts that reflect their unique classroom culture.

🏆 Weekly Reflection

End the week by discussing: Which skill did you practice most? Which do you want to work on more?

🏡 Home Connection

Send fortune tellers home with families and encourage them to add their own family-specific kindness ideas.

🎓 Why This Works

By framing kindness as a skill set and toolkit, we help children understand that kindness is:

  • Learnable – Not innate or fixed, but something that can be developed
  • Actionable – Specific behaviors they can practice right now
  • Buildable – Gets stronger with repetition, just like any other skill

The fortune teller format transforms practice into play, removing pressure while reinforcing that kindness is something we do, not just something we feel. Each prompt teaches a concrete relationship skill: appreciation, helping, sharing, respectful disagreement, gratitude expression, inclusive behavior, and active listening.

This Month™ – Connecting Learning to the Calendar

Artist in Residence: Nikita Tse • Origami Day: November 11 • Kindness Week