Getting Started
Managing Feelings
Dealing with Distractions
When You're Stuck
Organizing Chaos
100

The teacher says "Take out your notebook." What's the BEST tiny step 

  • A. Ask a friend what page they're using

  • B. Wait until others have theirs out

  • C. Flip through old notes to remind yourself of topics

  • D. Take out the notebook, write name/date, and get it read

  • Correct Answer: D. Take out the notebook, write name/date, and get it read

  • Explanation: This is a "micro-start." It puts you into work mode quickly.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Asking others slows you down and distracts them.

    • B → Waiting delays your start.

    • C → Looking through old notes doesn't begin the new task

100

You're thinking about home or family stress during class. What's the best first step?

  • A. Try to ignore the thoughts and work fast

  • B. Take 2 slow breaths to settle your body

  • C. Stare at your paper until the feeling passes

  • D. Put your head down and go to sleep

  • Correct Answer: B. Take 2 slow breaths to settle your body

  • Explanation: Breathing calms the nervous system so you can focus.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Ignoring feelings usually makes them louder.

    • C → Staring doesn't help you regulate.

    • D → Sleeping avoids the problem instead of managing it.

100

Distracting Friends

  • Question: A friend keeps trying to talk to you. What should you do?

    • A. Move materials closer to look busy

    • B. Quietly signal or whisper, "I need a couple minutes to work"

    • C. Turn your body slightly away

    • D. Joke back for a moment

  • Correct Answer: B. Quietly signal or whisper, "I need a couple minutes to work"

  • Explanation: This sets a clear boundary while staying respectful and quiet.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Looking busy isn't working.

    • C → Doesn't communicate your need.

    • D → Keeps the distraction going.

100

You don't know how to start your first sentence. What should you ask for?

  • A. Start in the middle

  • B. Ask for a sentence starter

  • C. Wait for someone else to begin

  • D. Reread directions

  • Correct Answer: B. Ask for a sentence starter

  • Explanation: It gives you the exact tool you need to begin writing.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Can confuse you later.

    • C → Keeps you stuck.

    • D → Won't magically give you the first sentence.

100

Question: When a task is overwhelming, what's the MAIN reason tiny steps work?

  • A. They make you look busy

  • B. They beat the stuck/overwhelmed feeling

  • C. They let you avoid hard parts

  • D. They give you an excuse to take breaks

  • Correct Answer: B. They beat the stuck/overwhelmed feeling

  • Explanation: Tiny steps break mental paralysis by making the task feel doable.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Looking busy isn't the goal.

    • C → Helps you start, not avoid.

    • D → About starting, not breaking.

200

You're told to start a 5-paragraph essay. What should you do FIRST?

  • A. Rewrite the question multiple times to warm up

  • B. Wait for the teacher to explain again

  • C. Write one sentence to get momentum, even if it's not perfect

  • D. Write the title neatly at the top of the page

  • Correct Answer: C. Write one sentence to get momentum, even if it's not perfect

  • Explanation: This is the smallest action that actually starts the assignment. One sentence breaks the "stuck" feeling.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Rewriting the question looks like work but doesn't help start the essay.

    • B → Waiting keeps you stuck and wastes time.

    • D → Writing only the title doesn't move you forward with the real task

200

You feel tired and unmotivated to start work. What should you do?

  • A. Tell yourself you'll start when you're fully motivated

  • B. Do a quick 1-minute start just to get yourself going

  • C. Ask a friend whether they feel tired too

  • D. Put your head down for a minute first

  • Correct Answer: B. Do a quick 1-minute start just to get yourself going

  • Explanation: Starting for just one minute helps your brain get unstuck and builds momentum.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → You may never feel motivated; this keeps you stuck.

    • C → Asking a friend doesn't help you begin.

    • D → Putting your head down stops progress.

200

The person next to you is loud. What's the best solution?

  • A. Wait for perfect silence

  • B. Look around to see who else is distracted

  • C. Try to focus harder even with the noise

  • D. Ask the teacher if you can move to a quieter spot

  • Correct Answer: D. Ask the teacher if you can move to a quieter spot

  • Explanation: You're solving the problem so you can focus and start.

  • Why others are wrong:

  • * A → Perfect silence is unrealistic.

    • B → Looking around wastes time.

    • C → Forcing focus in noise usually doesn't work.

200

You made a mistake on your paper. What should you do?

  • A. Erase everything

  • B. Rewrite everything

  • C. Cross it out and keep going

  • D. Stop working

  • Correct Answer: C. Cross it out and keep going

  • Explanation: Mistakes are normal; this keeps momentum going.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Wastes time and energy.

    • B → Unnecessary.

    • D → Blocks progress.

200

What's wrong with "waiting for motivation"?

  • A. Motivation takes too long

  • B. Motivation never comes / you'll stay stuck

  • C. Motivation only works for fun things

  • D. Motivation requires teacher help

  • Correct Answer: B. Motivation never comes / you'll stay stuck

  • Explanation: Action creates motivation, not the other way around.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Motivation doesn't just show up.

    • C → Works for everything, but waiting doesn't.

    • D → Motivation is internal.

300

You have a long science packet due. What's the best tiny step?

  • A. Skim the whole packet to find the hardest parts

  • B. Set it aside until you have more time

  • C. Do all diagrams first, even if out of order

  • D. Start by completing just the first question

  • Correct Answer: D. Start by completing just the first question

  • Explanation: This is the smallest action that gets you into the task.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Looking for the hardest part increases stress.

    • B → Putting it aside makes you more behind.

    • C → Doing diagrams first may not help you begin the real content.

300

You just can't focus at all during independent work. What should you try?

  • A. Sit still and hope the feeling passes

  • B. Move seats without asking

  • C. Wait until the next subject

  • D. Ask to use a 3-minute focus timer

  • Correct Answer: D. Ask to use a 3-minute focus timer

  • Explanation: A short, structured focus period helps your brain "switch on."

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Sitting still doesn't change focus.

    • B → Moving without permission causes issues.

    • C → Waiting means no work gets done.

300

Your binder is messy and you need an assignment. What's the best tiny step?

  • A. Flip randomly through sections

  • B. Wait until you get home

  • C. Pull out just 5 papers to sort first

  • D. Dump everything out

  • Correct Answer: C. Pull out just 5 papers to sort first

  • Explanation: This is a small, doable starting point for organizing.

  • Why others are wrong:

  •        A → Random flipping doesn't organize anything.

    • B → Waiting till get home delays the task and increases overwhelm.

    • D → Dumping everything out creates a bigger mess.

300

Overwhelming Length

  • Question: The assignment feels too long. What should you do?

    • A. Try to get halfway before a break

    • B. Look through all pages

    • C. Flip through hoping it feels shorter

    • D. Break it into chunks and choose one to start

  • Correct Answer: D. Break it into chunks and choose one to start

  • Explanation: Chunking reduces overwhelm and helps you start immediately.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Too big of a goal, causes shutdown.

    • B → Makes it feel even longer.

    • C → Avoids real work.

300

You're completely stuck. Which strategy helps your brain?


    • A. Think harder about the perfect way to begin

    • B. Wait until you understand everything

    • C. Do any tiny step or micro-start

    • D. Ask someone to do it for you

  • Correct Answer: C. Do any tiny step or micro-start

  • Explanation: Brains accept tiny steps. Once you start, it becomes easier to continue.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Keeps you stuck in your head.

    • B → You don't need perfection to start.

    • D → Doesn't help you personally get unstuck

400

You feel like giving up on your writing assignment. What should you do?

  • A. Write just the first 5 words

  • B. Skip to the conclusion

  • C. Re-read the prompt again

  • D. Tell yourself you'll restart later

  • Correct Answer: A. Write just the first 5 words

  • Explanation: A very small start reduces overwhelm and gets your brain moving.

  • Why others are wrong: * B → Skipping ahead could make writing harder.

    • C → Re-reading doesn't help you begin.

    • D → Waiting means you won't start at all.

400

The teacher redirects you to focus on your work. What's the best response?

  • A. Tell the teacher you'll try later

  • B. Ask the teacher what exactly they want changed

  • C. Say "Okay," then try one tiny step

  • D. Continue what you were doing

  • Correct Answer: C. Say "Okay," then try one tiny step

  • Explanation: Acknowledging and taking action helps you reset and get back on track.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Waiting means you won't start.

    • B → Asking doesn't actually begin the work.

    • D → Continuing off-task behavior keeps you stuck

400

You forgot your pen or paper. What should you do?

  • A. Sit quietly until given something

  • B. Borrow what you need and start one small step

  • C. Wait for the teacher to notice

  • D. Ask a friend to show you their work

  • Correct Answer: B. Borrow what you need and start one small step

  • Explanation: You solve the problem quickly so you can begin working.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Avoids the task.

    • C → Wastes time.

    • D → Copying isn't starting your own work.

400

You want to avoid the whole assignment. What's the best approach?

  • A. Look at the entire assignment

  • B. Wait until later

  • C. Make a full plan

  • D. Choose one small section and complete only that part first

  • Correct Answer: D. Choose one small section and complete only that part first

  • Explanation: Chunking a big task makes it manageable.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Increases overwhelm.

    • B → Leads to more stress later.

    • C → Still doesn't get you started.

400

Which THREE strategies are examples of tiny steps?

  • A. Wait for help, think more, avoid task

  • B. Write one sentence, take 2 breaths, break into chunks

  • C. Complain, ask friends, look around

  • D. Make a detailed plan, organize perfectly, wait for motivation

  • Correct Answer: B. Write one sentence, take 2 breaths, break into chunks

  • Explanation: These are small, immediate actions that create forward momentum.

  • Why others are wrong: * A → Avoidance strategies.

    • C → Distractions.

    • D → Delays starting.

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