Foundations of Professionalism
Physical Safety
Real-Time Safety Awareness
Safety in Action (Scenario Practice)
Trip Safety
100

This core professional value requires youth workers to act honestly, ethically, and consistently.
A. Confidentiality
B. Integrity
C. Authority
D. Accountability

What is integrity?

100

The first step in preventing physical injury in a youth program.
A. Writing reports
B. Identifying hazards
C. Enforcing consequences
D. Calling parents

What is identifying hazards?

100

Being alert to what is happening around you in the moment is called this.
A.  Situational awareness
B. Observation
C. Monitoring 
D. Supervision

What is situational awareness?

100

A youth refuses to wear safety gear. What should you do?
A. Allow them to participate anyway
B. Give a warning and continue
C. Let peers handle it
D. Stop the activity until safety rules are followed

What is stop the activity until safety rules are followed?

100

 When should staff conduct head counts during a trip?

A. Before leaving, upon arrival, and during major transitions
B. Only before leaving the school building
C. Every two hours regardless of activities
D. Only at the end of the trip

 Before leaving, upon arrival, and during major transitions




200

Maintaining appropriate emotional and physical distance with youth is known as this professional standard.
A. Discipline
B. Supervision
C. Professional boundaries
D. Youth engagement

What are professional boundaries?

200

This should always be checked before a physical activity or game begins.
A. Attendance list
B. Environment (space, equipment, weather)
C. Youth behavior
D. Time schedule

What is the environment (space, equipment, weather)?

200

A sudden change in youth behavior may signal this type of safety concern.
A. Normal development
B. Boredom
C. Disrespect
D. Potential risk or escalation

What is a potential risk or escalation?

200

Two youth start pushing during free play. Your best immediate response?
A.  Separate them and de-escalate calmly
B. Yell at them
C. Ignore it
D. Send them home

What is separate them and de-escalate calmly?

200

 A staff member notices a student is missing during a head count. What should happen first?

A. Ask students to search independently
B. Wait a few minutes to see if the student returns
C. Continue the activity while another staff member looks
D. Notify the supervisor immediately and follow missing student procedures

Notify the supervisor immediately and follow missing student procedures




300

This principle means treating all youth fairly, regardless of background or personal bias.
A. Equality
B. Inclusion
C. Compliance
D. Equity (or fairness)

What is equity (or fairness)?

300

If a youth is injured, this action should happen before completing paperwork.
A. Calling a supervisor
B. Writing an incident report
C. Taking photos
D. Ensuring the youth’s immediate safety

What is ensuring the youth’s immediate safety?

300

This strategy involves positioning yourself to see and hear all youth.
A. Monitoring
B. Crowd control
C. Rule enforcement
D. Active supervision

What is active supervision?

300

You notice a broken piece of equipment mid-activity.
A. Finish the game
B. Warn youth to be careful
C. Stop use and remove the hazard
D. Fix it later

What is stop use and remove the hazard?

300

 Which example best demonstrates active supervision?

A. Monitoring students, moving through the area, and engaging with participants
B. Sitting in one location while observing from a distance
C. Talking with coworkers while students play nearby
D. Reviewing emails during activity time

Monitoring students, moving through the area, and engaging with participants

400

When a youth worker notices burnout or frustration, professionalism requires them to do this.
A. Seek support, supervision, or self-care
B. Take it out on youth
C. Ignore it and push through
D. Quit immediately

What is seek support, supervision, or self-care?

400

 This is an example of proactive physical safety.
A. Setting clear rules before activities begin
B. Ignoring small risks
C. Responding after an injury
D. Allowing youth to decide safety rules


What is setting clear rules before activities begin?

400

You notice rising tension during a game. What should you do first?
A. Intervene early or pause the activity
B. Let youth work it out
C. Ignore it
D. End the program

What is intervene early or pause the activity?

400

A youth discloses they feel unsafe around another youth.
A. Tell them to avoid the person
B. Seriously and report according to policy
C. Separate them and de-escalate calmly
D. Ask other youth about it

What is take it seriously and report according to policy?

400

Which item is most important for staff to have during a trip?

A. Portable speaker
B. Student roster and emergency contact information
C. Extra personal belongings
D. Personal tablet

Student roster and emergency contact information

500

This document typically outlines expectations for conduct, safety, and ethics in youth work.
A. Lesson plan
B. Incident report
C. Code of conduct (Handbook)
D. Staff schedule

What is a code of conduct? (Handbook)

500

Allowing unsafe horseplay because “kids will be kids” violates this safety responsibility.
A. Youth choice
B. Duty of care
C. Timeout
D. Teamwork

What is duty of care?

500

Ignoring small unsafe behaviors often leads to this bigger problem.
A. Youth boredom
B. Loss of trust
C. Rule breaking
D. Serious injury or loss of control

What is serious injury or loss of control?

500

During an outdoor activity, weather suddenly changes for the worse.
A. Continue as planned
B. Wait and see
C. Modify or cancel the activity for safety
D. Ask youth what they want to do

What is modify or cancel the activity for safety?

500

You witness a coworker respond physically to a student’s behavior, leaving a mark, and the coworker tells you, “It’s not a big deal.”

What went wrong is minimizing a serious safety and legal issue; what you should do is report the incident immediately, document facts only, follow mandated reporter laws, and prioritize student safety over staff loyalty.