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  4. Helpful Reports – High School

Helpful Reports – High School

To view this lesson plan as a PDF, click here.

Objectives 

Students will: 

  • Understand how anonymous reports are evaluated for urgency and credibility. 
  • Analyze and correct vague, dramatic, or ambiguous reports. 
  • Practice creating reports that are concise, objective, respectful, and actionable. 
  • Reflect on ethical considerations: safety, privacy, bias, and appropriate use. 

Materials 

  • Mini-Lesson Google Slides: Link
  • Student Paper: Link

Learning Activities 

Introduction 

  • Ask students: “What could happen if we don’t provide enough information in an anonymous report?” 

Mini-Lesson 

Explain that strong reports generally include: 

  • What you observed or heard (firsthand if possible) 
  • When it occurred (approx. time/date) 
  • Where it happened 
  • Why it concerns you 

Highlight respectful language and avoiding assumptions or diagnoses (“he’s crazy,” “she’s dangerous”). 

Provide anonymized, somewhat realistic samples. Students identify weaknesses such as: 

  • Emotional exaggeration 
  • Lack of detail 
  • Gossip/rumors 
  • Judgmental tone 

Report Rewriting 

With the student worksheet, give groups 4–6 sample anonymous reports with common issues: 

  • Overgeneralizing 
  • Emotional outbursts 
  • Missing key details 
  • Judgments instead of facts 
  • Rumors or “someone said that someone said…” 

Group Discussion 

Discuss: 

  • “Why is clarity important but not required for reporting?” 
  • “How do we avoid unintentionally shaming or labeling someone?” 
  • “Why is reporting still encouraged even if your description isn’t perfect?” 

Emphasize: It is always better to report than to stay silent. Adults can sort through details; students don’t need to investigate. 

Posted by Katie Beavers on March 18, 2026

Filed Under: LR VISION Blog

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