Education/Employment
Parenting
Addiction
Coping Skills
Basic Needs
100

A series of tests that will indicate whether or not they have a high school level of education

What is a GED (or high school equivalent)

100

Parents are nurturing, responsive, and supportive, yet set firm limits for their children. Allows for limited discussion and options. 

What is Authoritive Parenting?

100

The most abused substance in the United States.

What is Alcohol? 

100

Tools, strategies, or techniques that reduce stress and reduce the negative impacts stress has on your mental or physical well-being.

What is Stress Management?

100

5. Physiological needs

4. Safety needs

3. Love needs

2. Esteem needs

1. Self-actualization 

What are the basic hierarchy of needs?

200

Type of educational institution, which, depending on the country, may refer to either secondary or post-secondary education designed to provide vocational education or technical skills required to complete the tasks of a particular and specific job

What is Vocational School?

200

Parent who is afraid to set limits on children or believes a child has to be true to his or her own nature

What is Permissive Parenting?

200

Which has a higher fatality rate: prescription drugs or illegal drugs.

What is Prescription Drugs?

200

Confidence in one's own worth or abilities; self-respect

What is Self Esteem?

200

Personal security, financial security, health and well-being

What is Safety Needs?

300

Form completed by current and prospective college students in the United States to determine their eligibility for student financial aid

What is FASFA (Free Application Student Federal Aid)?

300

 High in both anxiety and avoidance. People who display this attachment style are often drawn to close relationships, yet they are simultaneously fearful of them.

What is Avoidant Attachment Style?

300

Social, environmental or emotional situations that remind people in recovery of their past drug or alcohol use. About 40 to 60 % of people in recovery go through this.

What is Relapse Triggers?

300

Practice of openly communicating and asserting personal values as way to preserve and protect against having them compromised or violated.

What is Setting Boundaries?

300

Benefits:

- Can improve concentration or productivity 

- May strengthen heart

- Production of dopamine 


What is Sleep?

400

Document created and used by a person to present their background, skills, and accomplishments

What is a Resume?

400

Low in both anxiety and avoidance. Tends to lead to stable, fulfilling relationships.  

What is Secure Attachment?

400

Condition of having a mental illness and a comorbid substance use disorder

What is Co-Occurring Disorders or Dual Diagnosis?

400

Benefits:

- Combats health conditions/diseases

- Improves mood

- Boosts energy

What is Exercise? 

400
Dental, hand washing, body, nails
What is Types of Hygiene? 
500

Enables the employer to determine if an applicant's skills, experience and personality meet the job's requirements.

What is the purpose of Interviewing?

500

If you leave a baby to cry it out, you leave it until it stops crying by itself rather than going to comfort it. Studies show this is an effective method.

What is the Cry-It-Out Method?

500

Blocks opiate receptors in the nervous system

What is Narcan?

500

Support accessible to an individual through social ties to other individuals, groups, and the larger community

What is Social Support?

500

Fuel we need to enable the body to break down food and then put this to use in the body to repair and build cells and tissue, which is basically our metabolism.

What is the Importance of Nutrients?