Manners Matter Now

Fix It, Don't Just Say Sorry Toolkit for Kids (The 3-Part Repair)

Teach your child that good manners mean fixing what they can, not just saying ‘sorry’ and walking away. This Fix It, Don’t Just Say Sorry toolkit for kids ages 6 to 12 gives you a leader overview, a 10-minute teaching script, practice scenarios, a kid reflection sheet, and a printable 3-Part Repair poster so your child can learn to name the mistake, apologize sincerely, and offer to make it right. Built for parents, teachers, and youth leaders who believe manners still matter.

Trust + Quick Proof

Fix it

Created by Vernon, author of Teaching Kids Good Manners: The Old School Way and founder of MannersMatterNow.com. This toolkit teaches kids how to go beyond hollow apologies and actually repair the situation using the 3-Part Repair method.

"My son used to just mumble 'sorry' and run off. Now he stops, names what he did, and asks how he can fix it. The change was almost immediate."

— Parent of two, Grand Rapids, MI

"The practice scenarios are gold. My students actually role-play real conflicts and walk away knowing what to do next time."

— 3rd Grade Teacher, Houston, TX

"We use the 3-Part Repair poster in our Sunday school room. The kids reference it on their own now when conflicts happen."

— Children's Ministry Director, Charlotte, NC

What's Inside

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This toolkit includes everything you need to teach real apology and repair to kids ages 6 to 12. Instead of stopping at “Say you're sorry,” this set shows children how to admit what they did, apologize sincerely, and take practical action to make things better.

1
Leader Overview and Teaching Script
A complete 10-minute guided lesson that walks you through how to introduce the 3-Part Repair using real-life examples, simple coaching language, and call-and-repeat practice.
2
Practice Scenario Cards
Three detailed scenarios plus bonus prompts where kids practice what to say after spilling, breaking, interrupting, lying, or hurting someone's feelings.
3
My Repair Plan Worksheet
A printable reflection sheet where kids identify a mistake, name who was affected, choose a repair step, and write or say their full apology.
4
3-Part Repair Mini-Poster
A colorful reminder poster with the three steps: Say What You Did, Say You're Sorry, Offer to Repair. Perfect for classrooms, bedrooms, counseling corners, or church walls.
5
Repair Ideas Cards
A practical set of “make it right” prompts such as clean it up, replace it, help fix it, write a note, or do a kind action that fits the situation.
6
Adult Coaching Tips
Guidance for parents, teachers, and leaders on keeping the tone calm, avoiding forced empty apologies, praising honest ownership, and building the repair habit over time.

How to Use It (7-Day Plan)

Fix It

Pick one apology skill and practice it for 5 to 10 minutes a day. By the end of the week, your child will understand that a real apology is not just words — it is words plus ownership plus repair.

1
Name the Wrong
Teach your child to say exactly what happened: “I knocked over your tower,” “I yelled at you,” or “I took it without asking.” Keep it specific and honest.
2
Say Sorry Clearly
Practice calm, direct apologies without excuses. Use short models like “I'm sorry for grabbing that from you” instead of “Sorry, but you made me mad.”
3
Ask How to Repair
Teach the powerful follow-up question: “How can I make it better?” or “What can I do to help fix this?” This shifts the focus from escaping trouble to making things right.
4
Choose a Repair Action
Use the Repair Ideas Cards to match the repair to the problem. Clean up a mess, replace something broken, write a note, or offer a helpful action.
5
Practice Real Scenarios
Role-play one or two common family or classroom situations. Let your child say the full 3-Part Repair out loud until it feels natural.
6
Reflect and Improve
Use the worksheet to talk about one recent mistake. Ask what part was hardest: saying what happened, saying sorry, or offering repair.
7
Use It in Real Life
Watch for one real moment during the day when your child needs to apologize. Coach gently, then step back and let them try the full repair process themselves.

Common Struggles

Does this sound familiar? This toolkit was built for exactly these moments:

"My child says 'sorry' just to get out of trouble."

The 3-Part Repair poster and teaching script show kids that an apology has structure. They learn that “sorry” is only the middle step, not the whole job.

"They keep saying sorry, but they do the same thing again tomorrow."

The Repair Plan worksheet slows the moment down and helps kids connect the mistake, the person affected, and the action needed to repair it. That reflection makes the lesson stick.

"I never know what to tell them to do after they apologize."

The Repair Ideas Cards give you ready-made next steps. Instead of guessing, you can guide your child toward a practical repair that matches the situation.

"My students argue, blame each other, and won't take ownership."

The scenario cards let children rehearse apologies before emotions are high. That practice helps them learn calm wording, personal responsibility, and better follow-through.

"I don't want to force fake apologies, but I still want accountability."

The adult coaching tips show how to avoid shaming, avoid power struggles, and still require a child to make things right. The goal is sincere ownership, not performance.

Printable + Interactive Practice

Keep the learning going

This toolkit includes printable PDFs. Unlock matching interactive practice in the Manners App to help kids build real-life manners with confidence.

Open the Manners App

Print it. Practice it. Reinforce it.


Frequently Asked Questions

What ages is this toolkit for?

The Fix It, Don't Just Say Sorry Toolkit for Kids is best for ages 6 to 12. Younger children can use the visuals and short scripts, while older children can handle fuller repair conversations and written reflection.

Can teachers use this in the classroom?

Yes. Teachers can use the scenario cards for morning meeting, SEL time, partner role-play, conflict repair practice, or behavior reset conversations after recess or group work.

How long does it take each day?

Most daily practice takes 5 to 10 minutes. You can use one scenario, one script, or one worksheet section at a time and still build steady growth.

Do I need the book to use this toolkit?

No. This toolkit stands on its own. It works as a quick family or classroom resource, and it also pairs well with the broader manners lessons in the book.

What if my child gets embarrassed easily?

Start with role-play, puppets, or written examples before using a real-life moment. Keep the tone calm and matter-of-fact so the child feels coached, not shamed.

Can I use this for homeschool, church, or counseling support?

Yes. The Fix It, Don't Just Say Sorry Toolkit for Kids works well in homeschool routines, Sunday school, youth groups, counseling support, and one-on-one family teaching moments.