Frustration Tolerance
School Situations
Personal
Life
Coping
Skills
Think It Through
100

What does “frustration tolerance” mean?

The ability to stay calm, keep trying, or cope when things don’t go your way.

100

You don’t understand a math problem after the teacher explains it. What is a frustration-tolerant response?

Asking for help, trying again, taking a break, using notes (multiple correct).

100

True or False: Frustration tolerance only matters in school.

False

100

Name one healthy coping strategy for frustration.

Deep breathing, walking away, positive self-talk, asking for help, music, movement.

100

Is frustration always a bad thing? Explain.

No, it can help us learn, grow, or realize what matters.

200

True or False: Having good frustration tolerance means you never feel frustrated.

False! It means you can handle frustration when it happens.

200

True or False: Shutting down and refusing to work is an example of good frustration tolerance.

False

200

Name one personal situation that might test frustration tolerance.

Family conflict, friendships, sports, work, chores, social media (any reasonable answer). 

200

Which is better when frustrated: reacting immediately or pausing first?

Pausing first

200

What happens in your body when you feel frustrated?

Tight muscles, fast heart rate, sweating, shallow breathing (any valid answer).

300

Which emotion is most closely connected to frustration?

Anger, stress, disappointment, or feeling overwhelmed (multiple answers accepted).

300

Name one school situation that commonly causes frustration.

Tests, homework, group work, time limits, grades, technology issues (any valid answer)

300

If a friend cancels plans last minute, what’s a frustration-tolerant response?

Express feelings calmly, adjust plans, talk it out, take space (multiple answers)

300

True or False: Coping strategies work instantly every time.

False

300

Which takes more strength: staying calm or reacting emotionally?

Staying calm (discussion encouraged).

400

Why is frustration tolerance important in high school?

It helps with learning, relationships, behavior, and handling pressure (any reasonable answer).

400

You studied but still failed a quiz. What’s a healthy next step?

Review mistakes, ask for feedback, make a new plan, retake if allowed.

400

Why can poor frustration tolerance cause problems in relationships?

It can lead to yelling, shutting down, arguing, or impulsive behavior.

400

What does “self-talk” mean when managing frustration?

The way you talk to yourself in your head.

400

How could better frustration tolerance help your future job or adult life?

Handling stress, working with others, problem-solving, responsibility.

500

Finish the sentence: Frustration tolerance is about how you ________, not whether you get frustrated.

Respond / react / cope.

500

What’s the difference between giving up and taking a break when frustrated?

Giving up stops effort; a break helps you calm down so you can try again.

500

Is it okay to feel frustrated with people you care about? Why or why not?

Yes! Feelings are normal; it’s how you handle them that matters.

500

Turn this thought into a frustration-tolerant one:
“I can’t do this. I’m bad at school.”

“This is hard, but I can try a different strategy” or similar reframe.

500

On a scale of 1–10, how strong is your frustration tolerance right now—and what could help raise it?

Opinion-based; no wrong answer!!!!