RIS General Knowledge
Safety & Emergency Awareness
Customer Service & Communication
Islamic Etiquette & Volunteer Mindset
Situational Scenarios (What would you do?)
100

The #1 phrase volunteers repeat 400 times a day

“As-salamu alaikum wristbands PLEASE”

100

This is the volunteer’s first “superpower” when a crowd starts rushing.

Staying calm and directing safely

100

The tone volunteers should always use, even under pressure?

Calm, respectful, and professional.

100

The proper etiquette when speaking to attendees.

Kindness, adab, and respectful language

100

A volunteer on your team looks overwhelmed. What should you do?

Check in, offer help, and notify your Lead if needed

200

The key item every volunteer must wear to identify themselves and access event areas.

A volunteer wristband and scarf

200

First person you should contact if someone faints or becomes sick

Team Lead

200

Body language that shows approachability to attendees.

Smiling and open posture

200

A Prophetic trait shown by speaking calmly and kindly.

Gentleness (rifq)

200

An attendee asks to enter a restricted area “just for a minute.” How do you respond?

Politely decline and explain it’s restricted for safety

300

The document every volunteer should review before their first shift to understand rules, roles, and safety procedures.

RIS Volunteer Handbook

300

The behavior volunteers must prevent during crowd surges.

Pushing

300

One technique volunteers can use to de-escalate a situation.

Stay calm, listen actively, lower your voice, offer solutions, or involve a Lead

300

Islamic values volunteers should demonstrate during the event.

Patience, Respect & Kindness.

300

An attendee claims they “already paid” but has no wristband. What do you do?

Direct them to the Registration/Info Booth to verify

400

Expected shift arrival to ensure proper handoff and preparation.

10 minutes before the shift

400

These marked pathways must always be kept clear.

Emergency exits and fire routes

400

When someone is angry about waiting in line, this is the correct response.

Acknowledge their frustration and explain what you can do to help

400

The mindset that turns volunteering into worship.

Seeing service as ibadah (acts of worship)

400

You're running late for your shift and forgot your scarf

Communicate with your team lead and go to volunteer services
500

Unofficial national food of volunteers given each year from a Team Lead.

Honey Sticks

500

After finding a lost child, these two actions are important.

Keep the child safe with you and inform a Lead

500

When two attendees get into a conflict, the volunteer’s first responsibility.

Ensure safety, call your Lead, and avoid getting physically involved

500

The best way to maintain patience during long, busy hours.

Remember your intention and the reward

500

Media or someone with a camera asks to record you. What do you do?

Stay neutral and redirect them to appropriate RIS media