Exploring Values with Teens: Creative Games & Therapy Exercises

Sharing is caring!

Adolescence is a time of discovery — teens are figuring out who they are, what they care about, and how they want to show up in the world. Helping them explore their personal values builds self-awareness, resilience, and a stronger sense of identity.

In counseling or school settings, values-based activities can also give teens a safe way to talk about what matters most to them. This guide shares creative therapy games and exercises for exploring values with teens, blending self-expression with emotional growth.


1. Values Card Sort

How it works:

  • Create a deck of cards, each with a different value (honesty, creativity, family, adventure, kindness, independence).
  • Teens sort them into categories: “Very Important,” “Somewhat Important,” “Not Important.”

Why it helps: Prioritizing values makes abstract ideas concrete. Teens often discover surprising insights about what drives them.

Tip: Follow up with reflection questions: Which value feels most true to you right now? Which do you want to grow into?


2. The Values Compass

How it works:

  • Draw a large compass on paper or a whiteboard.
  • Label four directions with guiding areas (Family, Friends, School, Self).
  • Ask teens to place sticky notes with values under each direction.

Why it helps: This visual map shows how values can shift depending on life domains. It sparks discussion about balance and conflict.

Tip: Encourage teens to notice when values overlap — for example, kindness toward friends vs. responsibility at school.


3. Art-Based Values Collage

How it works:

  • Provide magazines, colored paper, and markers.
  • Teens cut out images, words, or colors that represent what they value.
  • Assemble into a personal collage to display or keep in a journal.

Why it helps: Art opens up nonverbal expression, perfect for teens who struggle to put feelings into words.

Tip: End with a sharing circle where each teen names one value shown in their collage.


4. Values in Action Scenarios

How it works:

  • Present short scenarios (e.g., a friend asks for help with homework, someone is left out of a group, you’re pressured to skip class).
  • Teens discuss or role-play what choice they’d make and which values guide their decision.

Why it helps: Shows how values aren’t just ideas — they influence behavior. Teens reflect on how values show up in daily choices.

Tip: Ask: Which value did you use? Was it hard to stick to it?


5. The Values Timeline

How it works:

  • Draw a line representing past, present, and future.
  • Teens mark values that mattered to them as children, those that matter now, and values they want to carry forward.

Why it helps: Encourages perspective-taking and shows how values can evolve with age and experience.

Tip: Invite teens to circle one value they want to “grow into” over the next year.


6. Gratitude & Values Journaling

How it works:

  • Ask teens to write about a moment they felt proud of themselves.
  • Then guide them to connect that moment with the underlying value (e.g., honesty, bravery, kindness).

Why it helps: Builds self-esteem by connecting positive memories with personal strengths.

Tip: Turn this into a weekly routine where teens reflect on how they lived out a value.


Final Thoughts

Exploring values gives teens the language and awareness to understand themselves better. Whether through card sorts, collages, or scenario role-play, these values-based therapy activities help them connect with what truly matters.

By making values fun and creative, you also normalize reflection as part of growth — giving teens tools they can use long after counseling sessions.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top