Serving Others Toolkit for Kids

Raise a child who looks for ways to help — not ways to be noticed. Practical printable tools that build servant leadership, community awareness, and the habit of putting others first.

Trust + Quick Proof

Vernon J. DeFlanders Sr.

Vernon J. DeFlanders Sr.
Author • Educator • Founder, MannersMatterNow.com

Vernon J. DeFlanders Sr. is the author of Teaching Kids Good Manners: The Old School Way and the founder of MannersMatterNow.com, a character and manners education platform serving families, schools, and youth organizations.

“My daughter now asks every Sunday after church what we can do to help someone that week. She started that on her own. This toolkit built that instinct.”
— Christine O., mother of a 10-year-old
“The Acts of Service Challenge Cards gave my son a framework for caring about people outside his immediate world. By challenge 4, he was raising money for a classmate’s family in crisis. He’s 9 years old.”
— Marcus T., father
“I used the Family Serving Together Guide to plan our first volunteer day as a family. Everything the guide said to do worked exactly as described. My kids are already asking when we’re going back.”
— Deborah P., mother of three

How to Use It (7-Day Plan)

Parent and child volunteering together

One focused week to introduce servant leadership — then eight weeks of challenge cards to build it into a lifestyle. Here’s how the first week works:

1

Day 1 — Eyes to See

Review 3–4 Servant Leader Practice Cards. Talk about how service begins with noticing. Ask your child: who in your life needs help right now that you haven’t noticed?

2

Day 2 — Service Planning

Use the Service Planner to identify one person your child will serve this week. Write it down. Plan the when, where, and how.

3

Day 3 — Community Awareness

Complete the Community Helpers Map together. Discuss what each person in the community does and how your family can show appreciation.

4

Day 4 — Gratitude to Action

Start the Gratitude & Service Journal. Have your child name one thing they’re grateful for and one way they can share that gift with someone else.

5

Day 5 — Challenge Accepted

Draw the first Acts of Service Challenge Card. Plan together how your child will complete it by the end of the week.

6

Day 6 — Family Conversation

Use the Family Serving Together Guide to discuss one cause or community need your family might address together. Let the children drive the conversation.

7

Day 7 — Celebrate and Reflect

Review what was done this week. Ask: how did it feel to serve? What did you notice about the person you helped? Add the final sticker.

What’s Inside

Six printable tools designed to move a child from passive bystander to active servant — in everyday moments at home, at school, and in the community. Ages 5–12.

Serving Others toolkit materials on a wooden table

1

The Servant Leader Practice Cards (10 cards)

Ten everyday scenarios where a child can choose to serve: the neighbor carrying groceries, the classmate who drops their lunch, the younger sibling who can’t reach something, the elder who needs a door held. Children practice noticing and responding.

2

The Service Planner

A weekly planning sheet where children identify one person to serve, one act they’ll do, and how they’ll follow through. Turns good intentions into scheduled commitments.

3

Community Helpers Map

A printable activity where children identify people in their community who serve others — firefighters, teachers, elders, volunteers — and what they can do to show appreciation for each one.

4

The Gratitude & Service Journal (7 days)

Daily prompts connecting gratitude to service: children who appreciate what they have are children who want to share it. Bridges the gap between thankfulness and action.

5

Acts of Service Challenge Cards (8 cards)

Eight age-appropriate service challenges ranging from simple (write a thank-you note) to meaningful (organize a donation drive, volunteer for one hour). One per week for 8 weeks.

6

Family Serving Together Guide

A discussion and planning guide for families who want to serve together: how to choose a cause, how to prepare children for volunteering, and how to debrief the experience afterward.

Common Struggles

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

“My child only helps when I ask — and even then, reluctantly.”

The Practice Cards reframe service as something you notice, not something you’re told to do. Children who are trained to look for opportunities need less prompting because the habit is internal, not external.

“I want to volunteer as a family but don’t know where to start.”

The Family Serving Together Guide walks you through exactly how to choose a cause, prepare your children for the experience, and process it afterward. The planning removes the excuse.

“My child helps at home but ignores needs outside the family.”

The Community Helpers Map and Challenge Cards explicitly extend service beyond the household. Serving starts at home and grows outward — this toolkit builds both.

“My child does one act of service and considers themselves a servant leader.”

The Acts of Service Challenge Cards are designed for 8 weeks of expanding service. The goal is a lifestyle, not a one-time event.

“My child expects praise every time they do something for someone else.”

The Gratitude & Service Journal builds intrinsic motivation by connecting service to thankfulness — not reward. Children who serve from gratitude don’t need applause.

Keep the Learning Going

The MannersMatterNow App gives your child matching interactive practice to go alongside every printable in this toolkit. Reinforce the same skills digitally — great for car rides, waiting rooms, or any time your child has a few minutes. Visit MannersMatterNow.com to explore all available resources.

Print it. Practice it. Reinforce it.

Open the MannersMatterNow App

Built on the Book Parents Already Trust

Every technique in this toolkit comes from the framework in Teaching Kids Good Manners the Old-School Way — rated 4.8 stars with over 140 reviews on Amazon. The book gives you the complete parenting philosophy. This toolkit gives your child the daily practice. Together, they build habits that last.

See the Book on Amazon →

Built on the book. Scan to find it on Amazon.

Scan to get the book on Amazon

amazon.com/dp/B0GG6KGQK7

Serving Others — Frequently Asked Questions

What ages is this for?

Ages 5–12. Younger children engage with the Practice Cards and Community Helpers Map; older children connect deeply with the Challenge Cards and Journal.

Is this a faith-based toolkit?

The toolkit is rooted in the value of servant leadership — a concept with deep roots in Christian tradition — but it is useful for any family that wants to raise a child who thinks about others.

What do I receive?

A printable PDF with all six tools. One license covers your household.

Is this toolkit faith-based or secular?

The Serving Others Toolkit is fully secular and works in any setting — home, school, public programs, or community groups. An optional faith-friendly framing is included for families and youth groups who want to connect these skills to values of respect and service. The main toolkit stands completely on its own without it.

Can I use this in a classroom or youth ministry?

Yes. The Community Helpers Map and Family Serving Together Guide adapt easily to group settings. The Challenge Cards work well as a classroom or youth group project.

How is this different from just teaching kids to do chores?

Chores build responsibility within the home. This toolkit builds service outward — noticing others’ needs, responding without being asked, and developing a lifestyle of servant leadership.

My child already volunteers regularly. Is this still useful?

Yes. The toolkit builds the WHY behind service — connecting it to gratitude, character, and community identity — not just the habit of showing up. Children who understand why they serve are children who keep serving as adults.

Related Toolkits & Resources

Ready to Teach Serving Others the Old-School Way?

Download the Serving Others Toolkit today and give your child a framework for noticing needs, responding without being asked, and building a lifetime habit of servant leadership. Six printable tools. One week to start. Eight weeks to build it in.
Get the Toolkit – $7.99

<

p style=”text-align:center;margin-top:32px;font-size:14px;color:#555;”>Product details: Serving Others Toolkit for Kids — $7.99 — Instant digital download (PDF) — MannersMatterNow.com — Ages 5–12