SOCIAL CONFIDENCE & SELF-ADVOCACY
PROBLEM-SOLVING & PERSPECTIVE-TAKING
EMOTION IDENTIFICATION & MANAGEMENT
COMMUNICATION & CONVERSATION SKILLS
ACCOUNTABILITY & CONFLICT RESOLUTION
FRIENDSHIP SKILLS
100

Your friend didn't invite you to their birthday party. What's one way you could respond?

• Ask them why • Talk to them calmly about your feelings • Ask if you can still be friends • Accept it and move on

100

"Your friend is upset. What's the first step to help solve the problem?"

• Ask what's wrong • Listen to them • Show you care • Ask how you can help

100

"Name one emotion you might feel if you won a game."

• Happy • Excited • Proud • Confident • Joyful

100

"What are 2 ways to greet someone politely?"

• Say "Hi" or "Hello" • Wave • Shake hands • Smile • Make eye contact • Say their name

100

"What does it mean to take accountability?"

• Admit what you did • Take responsibility • Say sorry • Own your mistake • Fix it if you can

100

"How do you politely ask to join a game?"

• "Can I play?" • "May I join?" • "Is there room for one more?" • "Can I be on your team?" • Smile and ask nicely

200

"You want to join a game at recess but don't know anyone playing. What could you do?"

• Ask "Can I play?" • Watch for a moment then ask to join • Find someone you know and ask them to play • Ask an adult for help joining in

200

"Two students want the same book. What's one fair solution?"

• Take turns reading it • Share it together • One person reads it first, then the other • Check out different copies • Make a waiting list

200

What's one thing you can do when you feel frustrated?"

• Take deep breaths • Take a walk • Drink water • Ask for help • Count to 10 • Squeeze a stress ball • Talk to someone

200

"How do you take turns in a conversation?"

• Listen while the other person talks • Wait for them to finish • Then say your thing • Don't interrupt • Give them time to speak

200

"You accidentally hurt a friend's feelings. What should you do first?"

• Apologize • Say you're sorry • Explain it was an accident • Ask what you can do to help • Listen to how they feel

200

"What does it mean to take turns? Give an example."

• One person goes, then another • Everyone gets a chance • You wait while someone else does something • Example: In a game, I roll the dice, then you roll the dice

300

"A classmate keeps borrowing your supplies without asking. How would you handle it?"

• Tell them to ask first • Say "You need to ask me before borrowing" • Keep supplies in your backpack • Tell a teacher

300

"Your peer says you were mean, but you didn't mean to be. What could you do?"

• Apologize • Explain you didn't mean it • Ask what you did that hurt them • Ask how you can make it better

300

"If you're feeling anxious, name 2 calming strategies."

• Deep breathing AND listening to music • Walking AND talking to someone • Drawing AND deep breaths • Stretching AND counting • Drinking water AND sitting quietly

300

"Name 2 things that show good listening (eye contact, body language, etc.)."

• Make eye contact • Face the person • Nod your head • Keep your body still • Don't look at your phone • Smile • Say "mm-hmm" or "I see"

300

"State your role in a conflict: 'My friend and I both wanted the same toy.'"

• I wanted the toy too • I should have asked to share • I could have waited my turn • I didn't listen to my friend • I was being selfish

300

Your friend suggests a game you don't like. How do you respond politely?"

• "I don't really like that game, but thanks for asking" • "Can we play something else instead?" • "I appreciate the idea, but I'd rather play [other game]" • "Maybe next time"

400

"You made a mistake on a group project. How could you advocate for yourself?"

• Tell the group what happened • Offer to fix it • Explain what you'll do better next time • Ask for help

400

"A friend keeps getting frustrated during games. How might they be feeling? What could help?"

• They might feel angry/upset • Losing makes them frustrated • They could take a break • You could encourage them • Play a different game • Give them space to calm down

400

"What's the difference between excitement and frustration? How would your body feel with each?"

Excitement: Happy, energetic, smiling, fast heartbeat, want to jump around • Frustration: Angry, tense, frowning, tight chest, want to yell or stomp

400

"Your friend is talking. What's one way you can show you're interested?"

• Make eye contact • Nod along • Ask questions • Say "That sounds cool!" • Lean in • Smile • Respond to what they said

400

"Apologize and explain what you'll do differently next time."

• "I'm sorry I [what I did]. Next time I will [what I'll do better]." • Example: "I'm sorry I interrupted you. Next time I'll wait my turn to talk."

400

"What's one way to be a good friend when someone is upset?"

• Listen to them • Ask what's wrong • Offer to help • Sit with them • Give them space if they need it • Say something kind • Suggest an activity to cheer them up

500

"You're uncomfortable with something a peer is asking you to do. What's one thing you could say?"

• "No, I don't want to do that" • "I'm not comfortable with that" • "That doesn't feel right to me" • "I need to tell an adult"

500

"Describe what your classmate might be thinking if you accidentally bumped into them."

• They might think it was an accident • They might be hurt • They might wonder if you did it on purpose • They could be worried you're mad • They might want you to apologize

500

You're feeling frustrated. What triggered that feeling, and what could you do about it?"

Trigger examples: Lost a game, someone was mean, can't do something, didn't get what I wanted • What to do: Take a break, talk about it, use a calming strategy, ask for help, try again

500

"Demonstrate appropriate volume for a classroom discussion vs. a library."

• Classroom: Normal talking voice, louder than a whisper, people nearby can hear • Library: Quiet voice or whisper, very soft, only the person next to you can hear

500

"Describe what your peer might think or feel about a conflict you had."

• They might feel hurt • They might think I was mean • They might be upset with me • They might not want to be my friend • They might feel left out • They might want me to apologize

500

"Describe how to start and maintain a friendly conversation."

Start: Greet them, ask a question, smile • Maintain: Listen, take turns talking, ask follow-up questions, respond to what they say, keep eye contact, show interest

M
e
n
u