Types of Pressures
Positive Vs. Negative Influence
Refusal Skills and Assertiveness
Peer Pressure Scenarios
Decision making and Support
100

What is peer pressure?

Influence from others to behave in a certain way.

100

What is positive peer pressure?

Encouragement from friends to make healthy choices.

100

What is assertive communication?

 Speaking honestly and respectfully while standing up for yourself.

100

 A friend says, “Everyone’s doing it.” What’s a strong refusal?

“I’m not everyone — I’m making my own choice.”

100

What’s the first step in resisting pressure?

Know your personal values and boundaries.

200

What is direct pressure?

When someone openly asks or tells you to do something.

200

Give an example of positive peer pressure.

A teammate motivating you to stay drug-free.

200

What is an “I-statement”?

A statement expressing your feelings or needs without blaming others.

200

Your group laughs at someone for saying no to drugs. What should you do?

Speak up or walk away to show support for healthy choices.

200

Why is having a support system important?

Friends and family who respect your choices can help you stay strong.

300

What is indirect pressure?

When the influence is subtle—like seeing others do something and feeling tempted to join in.

300

What is negative peer pressure?

Influence that leads to unsafe, unhealthy, or illegal choices.

300

Which body language shows assertiveness?

Eye contact, calm tone, confident posture.

300

A friend keeps texting you to sneak out. What’s your best response?

“No thanks — I’m not risking getting in trouble.”

300

What’s a benefit of resisting pressure?

Builds confidence and self-respect.

400

Give one example of indirect pressure

Give one example of indirect pressure

400

Why is positive peer pressure important?

It can help you develop good habits and stay motivated.

400

What are the 3 steps of saying “No”?

1️⃣ Say no clearly 2️⃣ Give a reason 3️⃣ Suggest an alternative or leave.

400

You’re offered alcohol at a party. What refusal skill could you use?

Firm “No,” eye contact, and change the subject or leave.

400

Who can you turn to if you feel pressured?

A trusted adult, teacher, coach, or counselor.

500

What’s one difference between direct and indirect pressure?

Direct = spoken or explicit; Indirect = unspoken or implied through actions or culture.

500

What can happen when you give in to negative pressure?

Loss of trust, safety risks, or damage to your reputation and self-esteem.

500

Why is being assertive better than being aggressive?

Assertiveness shows confidence and respect; aggression disrespects others and escalates conflict

500

Someone pressures you online to share personal info. What’s the right move?

Don’t respond — block and report them, then tell a trusted adult.

500

How does goal-setting help resist pressure?

Clear goals keep you focused on your priorities and less likely to give in.