Advocacy
Mentoring & Education
Ethical Responsibility
Recovery & Wellness
Harm Reduction
100

In peer support, advocacy means walking ____ someone, not talking over them.

What is “with”?

100

Mentoring in peer recovery is about walking beside someone rather than doing what?

What is directing their life?

100

Peer ethics are based on shared standards of behavior shaped by what?

What is lived experience?

100

SAMHSA defines how many dimensions of wellness?

What is eight?

100

Harm reduction focuses on reducing harm without requiring what?

What is immediate abstinence?

200

Name the three types of advocacy practiced in peer recovery.

What are self-advocacy, individual advocacy, and systems advocacy?

200

What type of language should peers use to replace labels like “addict” or “crazy”?

What is person-first, respectful language?

200

Name two core values of peer support ethics.

What are mutual respect and cultural humility?

200

Give one example of personal recovery capital.

What is skills, resilience, values, or health?

200

Name one harm reduction practice mentioned in training.

What is naloxone distribution, safer use education, clean syringe access, or MAT?

300

Before speaking on a peer’s behalf, what ethical step should you take?

What is checking in with the peer first?

300

When sharing your story, what’s the first question you should ask yourself?

What is “Why am I sharing this right now?”

300

Confidentiality must be broken if there is a clear risk of what?

What is harm to self or others?

300

Self-care in peer work is considered what — optional or necessary?

What is necessary?

300

In trauma-informed harm reduction, what question replaces “What’s wrong with you?”

What is “What happened to you?”

400

What’s the main role of a Peer Recovery Specialist as an advocate?

What is supporting dignity, inclusion, and access without taking over?

400

SMART goals stand for Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and what?

What is Time-bound?

400

Ethical storytelling should focus on connection, hope, and relevance, while avoiding what?

What is oversharing or triggering others?

400

Name two sources of resilience in recovery.

What are lived experience, cultural pride, connection, faith, or recovery identity?

400

What’s a key principle of supporting peer-led solutions in harm reduction?

What is honoring that people are experts in their own lives?

500

Community-based advocacy connects peers with resources and what other key element?

What is collective action to create systemic change?

500

Name one key behavior that shows effective recovery modeling.

What is demonstrating honesty, hope, boundaries, or wellness practices?

500

In ethical decision-making, what are the five steps in the decision process?

What are pause, reflect, consult, decide, and document?

500

In peer support, recovery is defined by who?

What is the person experiencing it?

500

Harm reduction advocacy aims to fight stigma and push for what kind of access?

What is low-barrier, compassionate access to care and resources?