Question:
A student says, “I always understand the directions, but I still don’t finish my work in class.”
What is one time management mistake they might be making, and one fix?
Mistake: Starting late / getting distracted
Fix: Start work immediately, set a timer, focus during work time
Question:
A student says, “I don’t have enough time in class.”
What is one realistic reason this might be happening?
Talking during work time
Not starting work right away
Getting distracted
Not listening to directions
Question:
You have 10 minutes left in class and two tasks:
Finish an important assignment
Help a friend with their work
Finish your own assignment first
Question:
A student says, “I’m always behind even when I try.”
What is one possible root problem?
Poor planning
Starting late
Being distracted
Question:
What would happen if students never used deadlines?
Work would be late
Less accountability
Question:
A student sets this goal:
“I will do all my homework every night.”
As a coach, what is one problem with this goal, and how would you improve it?
Problem: Not specific or measurable
Improvement: Add time, number, or deadline
Question:
A student works hard but still feels rushed every day.
What is one habit they might need to change to manage time better?
Start work sooner
Stop multitasking
Use a planner
Follow directions the first time
Question:
You start an assignment but realize it’s harder than expected.
Do you keep working or move on and come back later? Explain.
Keep working if it’s due soon
Move on if another task has a closer deadline
Question:
A student finishes work but often forgets to turn it in.
Is this more of a time management issue or an organization issue? Why?
Work is done, but not tracked or submitted
Question:
What would happen if a goal had no measurement?
You wouldn’t know if you succeeded
Question:
A student says, “I tried a SMART goal, but it didn’t work, so goals don’t help me.”
What would you say to coach them forward?
Goals sometimes need to be adjusted
The goal may have been unrealistic
Try a smaller or shorter goal
Question:
Why is it unrealistic to think you can “make up time later” during class?
Class time is limited
Once time is gone, it can’t be reused
Other tasks also need time
Question:
Why is spending too much time trying to make one assignment “perfect” a time-management problem?
Other work doesn’t get finished
Causes rushing later
Time is limited
Question:
A student sets good goals but never follows through.
What part of the process is missing?
Monitoring progress
Accountability
Planning steps
Question:
What would happen if a student always rushed at the end of class?
Lower-quality work
More mistakes
Question:
A student wastes time talking in class, then rushes and turns in incomplete work.
As the coach, what are two strategies you would recommend and why?
Strategy 1: Start work immediately → avoids rushing
Strategy 2: Save talking for after work → more focus
Strategy 3 (acceptable): Use a timer or checklist
Question:
How can poor time management affect more than just your grade?
Stress increases
Group members are affected
Teachers and classmates lose time
Less free time later
Question:
You finish early in class.
Is it better to relax or start your next assignment? Defend your choice.
Start next assignment
Why:
Reduces future workload
Prevents stress
✔ Relaxing acceptable if work is fully complete and expectations met
Question:
Why is “being busy” not the same as “using time well”?
Busy doesn’t mean productive
You can be busy without finishing important tasks
Question:
What would happen if students managed time well only in one class?
Some success, but not consistent
Stress in other classes
Question:
A student has three assignments due the same day and feels overwhelmed.
How would you coach them to use time management and SMART thinking to handle this?
Break work into smaller steps
Decide which task is most important first
Set mini-deadlines for each assignment
Use a planner or checklist
Question:
A student says, “I work better under pressure.”
Why might this be true sometimes, but not a good long-term plan?
Pressure can help focus short-term
Long-term rushing causes stress and mistakes
Not reliable or healthy
Question:
You have three assignments due tomorrow and limited time tonight.
How should you decide what to do first and why?
Start with the most important or longest task
Break tasks into steps
Set mini-deadlines
Question:
What is one sign that a student’s problem is planning, not effort?
They work hard but run out of time
They don’t break tasks into steps
Question:
What would happen over time if a student practiced good time management every day?
Better grades
Less stress
More free time