Rights + Responsibilities
Pressure Check
Fact or Guess?
Self-Advocacy Phrases
Serious Moments
100

Fire Alarm

Question:
A fire alarm goes off. Someone says, “I have the right to stay here if I want.”

What responsibility is being missed?

Answer:
The responsibility to leave the building and follow safety directions.

Quick Review:
Rights matter, but safety directions still matter.

100

Question:
Someone says, “Don’t tell anyone about this.”

What is the red flag?

Answer:
Secrecy.

Quick Review:
Secrecy can be a red flag. It is safer to slow down before agreeing.

100

Seen or Assumed

Question:
“I saw him pull on three car door handles.”

Is this a fact or a guess? How do you know?

Answer:
Fact.

How We Know:
The person is saying what they saw.

100

Confused

Question:
Someone gives directions, but you do not understand.

What is one self-advocacy sentence you could say?


Answer Example:
“Can you say that another way?”

Quick Review:
Self-advocacy means speaking up for what you need.

100

Medicine

Question:
You need medicine soon, but you are being asked to wait in a security office.

What should you say?

Answer Example:
“I need medicine soon. It is in my bag.”

Quick Review:
Medical needs should be clear and direct.

200

Doctor Visit

Question:
A doctor gives someone a new medicine. The person does not understand what it is for.

What right could the person use?

Answer:
The right to ask questions about the medicine.

Possible Sentence:
“What is this medicine for?”

200

Password Request

Question:
Someone says they can fix your phone account, but they need your password first.

What is the safer choice?

Answer:
Do not share the password. Contact the real company yourself.

Quick Review:
Passwords are private information.

200

Probably

Question:
“She probably knows him.”

Is this a fact or a guess? How do you know?

Answer:
Guess.

How We Know:
The word “probably” shows they do not know for sure.

200

Rushed

Question:
Someone wants an answer right now, but you need time to think.

What can you say to advocate for yourself?


Answer Example:
“I need a moment before I answer.”

Quick Review:
Asking for time can help you avoid rushed choices.

200

Official Letter

Question:
You get an official letter with a deadline, but you do not understand it.

What is the safest next step?

Answer:
Ask someone you trust, a counselor, a legal aid office, or the office listed on the letter to help explain it before the deadline.

Quick Review:
Deadlines matter. Ask for help early.

300

Police Questions

Question:
Police are asking someone questions about a crime. The person feels scared and does not know what to say.

What right could the person use?

Answer:
The right to ask for a lawyer.

Possible Sentence:
“I want to speak with a lawyer.”

300

Lie For Me

Question:
A friend says, “Just tell them I was with you yesterday. It is not a big deal.”

What is the pressure problem?

Answer:
They are asking you to lie.

Possible Sentence:
“I am not comfortable lying.”

300

Crash Report

Question:
“I heard a crash and saw a bike on the ground.”

Is this a fact or a guess? How do you know?

Answer:
Fact.

How We Know:
The person reports what they heard and saw.

300

Next Step

Question:
A worker explains five steps. You only understand the first step.

What can you ask to advocate for yourself?

Answer Example:
“Can you explain the next step?”

Quick Review:
Asking for one step at a time can make information easier to use.

300

Security Questions

Question:
Security asks what happened, but you did not see it.

What should you say?

Answer:
“I did not see what happened.”

Quick Review:
Say what you know. Do not guess.

400

Reporting Harm

Question:
Someone sees another person being threatened outside a store.

What responsibility could matter here?

Answer:
The responsibility to report what they saw or heard.

Quick Review:
Reporting a safety concern can help protect someone.

400

Bank Text

Question:
A text says, “Your bank account will close today. Click this link now.”

Name two warning signs.

Answer:
Pressure and a suspicious link.

Quick Review:
Urgent messages with links can be scams.

400

Front Entrance

Question:
“That person is dangerous.”

Is this a fact or a guess? How could we say it as a fact?

Answer:
Guess.

Better Fact-Based Report:
“A person is yelling near the front entrance.”

Quick Review:
Report actions you can describe.

400

Medical Instructions

Question:
A nurse explains new medicine instructions very quickly. You are not sure when to take the medicine.

What is one self-advocacy sentence you could say?

Answer Example:
“Can you write down when I should take it?”

Quick Review:
Self-advocacy can mean asking for information in a way you can understand and use later.

400

Medical Need

Question:
Someone feels shaky and says they have diabetes.

What important information should be shared?

Answer Example:
“I have diabetes. I may need sugar or medical help.”

Quick Review:
Health facts can help people respond safely.

500

Both At Once

Question:
Someone is at the hospital. They want to ask questions, but they also need to give true health information.

Name one right and one responsibility in this situation.

Answer:
Right: Ask questions about care.
Responsibility: Share true information about medicine, allergies, or symptoms.

Quick Review:
Rights and responsibilities can work together.

500

Money Pressure

Question:
Someone says, “If you trusted me, you would give me the money today.”

What is a safer first step?

Answer:
Pause and talk to someone you trust before giving money.

Quick Review:
Pressure is a reason to slow down, not rush.

500

Build A Report

Question:
You see someone fall near the vending machines. They are awake but cannot stand up.

Build a clear report with facts.

Answer Example:
“Someone fell near the vending machines. They are awake but cannot stand.”

Quick Review:
A clear report says what happened, where it happened, and who may need help.

500

Boundary

Question:
Someone asks a personal medical question at work.

What is one clear boundary sentence?


Answer Example:
“I keep that private.”

Quick Review:
Setting a boundary is a form of self-advocacy. You can protect your privacy without being rude.

500

Confession Pressure

Question:
A person feels scared and wants to confess just so the questioning stops.

What is the safer advice?

Answer:
Ask for a lawyer or call someone they trust before answering more questions.

Quick Review:
Do not confess just to stop stress. Ask for help first.

M
e
n
u