Active Listening
Communication Skills
Emotional Regulation
100

This skill involves looking at the speaker, nodding and showing you're paying attention. 

Active Listening

100

When you speak calmly and clearly to share your needs, it is called being: 

Assertive 

100

Taking a walk, journaling, or listening to music are all examples of: 

Coping skills 

200

This non-verbal cue can show someone that you are interested in what they are saying but too much can make someone uncomfortable: 

Eye-contact 

200

When you work effectively with others to reach a shared goal, it is called: 

Teamwork

200

Taking a breath when you're upset helps you do THIS: 

Calm down 

300
This type of listening focuses on the speakers' feelings 

Empathetic listening 

300

When you think before you act, especially around others, you are using this skill: 

Impulse control 


300

This is what you're doing when you are able to name what you're feeling, like "I'm stressed" or "I'm angry": 

Identifying emotions


400

The ability to recognize your own feelings: 

Self-awareness 

400

Keeping a promise to a friend can show this trait and builds this: 

Trustworthiness 

400

When you choose to act calmly instead of responding quickly, you're practicing this:

Emotional regulation

500

Using your own emotional awareness to guide your interactions with peers/others: 

Social awareness 

500

When two people speak calmy through a disagreement, they are: 

Resolving conflict 

500

This helps you stay focused on the present instead of worrying about the future; practicing: 

Mindfulness