You are telling a story and your friend is looking at his phone, giving one-word answers, and leaning away. What is his body language telling you?
A: He is bored, distracted, or wants to end the conversation.
If you text someone a massive paragraph about a problem you're having, and they reply with just "k", what should you do?
A: Leave it alone.
A teacher calls you out in front of the class for having your phone out. What is the fastest way to make the situation worse?
A: Arguing back, denying it when caught, or rolling your eyes.
If you ask a peer, "Did you see the game last night?" and he says "Yes," what kind of question should you ask next to keep the conversation from dying?
A: An open-ended question (e.g., "What did you think of that crazy play at the end?").
You and your friend both want to play different video games and only have one console. You agree to play his game for an hour, then your game for an hour. What did you two just reach?
A: A compromise.
If someone crosses their arms, tilts their head back, and rolls their eyes while you are talking, what emotion are they actively displaying?
A: Annoyance, defensiveness, or disrespect.
Why is typing an email to your coach or teacher in ALL CAPS generally a bad business move?
A: It translates to shouting/yelling in digital literacy.
Your gym coach tells you that your form on a drill is completely wrong. What is the correct psychological term for this kind of helpful, corrective input?
A: Constructive criticism (or constructive feedback).
You want to join a conversation about a video game you love, but two other guys are currently speaking. What is the tactical move to enter without being annoying?
A: Listen for a pause, then add a relevant comment or question tied to what they just said.
You find out a guy on the bus was talking trash about you. What is the highest-risk move you can make that usually leads to a principal's office or a suspension?
A: Aggressive physical confrontation or escalating the threat online.
Your friend says "Yeah, sure, sounds great" but in a flat tone without making eye contact. What social concept is being used here that means the words don't match the vibe?
A: Sarcasm (or passive-aggression).
You’re roasting a friend in a group chat, but he stops replying completely while everyone else laughs. What is the rule of thumb for when a "joke" turns into cyberbullying?
A: When the target stops laughing, asks you to stop, or becomes the sole target of the group.
If a teacher gives you a consequence you think is genuinely unfair, what is the correct time and place to argue your case?
A: Privately, either after class or during a break (not in front of the whole audience).
What do you call the social mistake of constantly shifting the conversation back to yourself (e.g., Friend: "I got a new shoe." You: "Oh yeah, my shoes are way more expensive.")?
A: Conversational hijacking (or "one-upping").
You accidentally bump into a massive high schooler in the hallway and he glares at you. What is the quickest, low-drama verbal script to de-escalate the situation instantly?
A: A quick, calm "My fault, man" or "My bad" while moving on.
When talking to someone, what is the "golden rule" zone for eye contact so you don't look totally checked out, but also don't look creepy?
A: Looking at them about 50–70% of the time (or making eye contact every few sentences, then looking away briefly).
What is the major psychological risk of trying to resolve a serious argument or "beef" via text message rather than talking face-to-face?
A: Tone gets easily misinterpreted because you can't hear their voice or see their face.
Your group partner tells you your part of the project looks rushed and needs to be redone. What is a mature, non-defensive question you can ask to fix it?
A: "What specifically needs to be changed?" or "How can I make it look better?"
If you are talking to someone you don't know well, what are two "safe" topics that almost anyone can talk about without things getting weird?
A: Sports, music, movies/shows, classes, or hobbies.
Your friends completely change their plans at the last second from going to the basketball court to staying inside to stream a movie. If you complain and ruin the mood, you lack what major social skill?
A: Flexibility (or adaptability).
You walk up to a group of three peers. Their feet and bodies stay facing each other in a tight circle, and they only turn their heads to look at you. What is this structural body language telling you?
A: The group is closed; they are having a private conversation and it is not a good time to join.
Name two specific pieces of information you should never put in a group chat if you want to maintain your social reputation and respect.
A: Someone else's secrets/rumors, screenshots of private DMs, or highly personal vents.
What is the internal skill called when you are furious about a bad grade or a penalty in a game, but you manage to keep your face neutral and your voice calm anyway?
A: Emotional regulation (or impulse control).
This term refers to the ability to listen to someone's problem and accurately understand exactly how they feel, even if you haven't been through it yourself. What is it?
A: Empathy.
Someone uses an "I-Statement" to tell you that you blew it on a team play. Why are "I-Statements" (like "I got frustrated when the ball didn't get passed") better than "You-Statements"?
A: They focus on the speaker's perspective instead of making the other person immediately defensive.