Size of the Problem
Expected vs. Unexpected
Big Reaction / Small Reaction
Problem-Solving Steps
Real-Life School Scenarios
100

Your phone battery is at 10% but you’ll be home in 20 minutes.
Small, medium, or big problem?

small

100

Someone borrows a pencil. Expected or unexpected?

 Expected — common in school.

100

Someone cuts in line by accident. What’s a small reaction?

“Hey, I think I was next.” or just letting it slide.

100

First step in solving a problem?

A: Identify/define the problem.

100

Teacher calls on you when you weren’t paying attention — what do you do?


A: Admit you missed it / ask to repeat / stay calm.

200

A teacher emails you saying you forgot to turn in an assignment, but you can still submit it tonight.
What size is the problem?

Medium problem — needs action but easily fixable.

200

Friend yells your name in a silent room.

Unexpected — not appropriate for the setting.

200

Sibling eats your snack. Give one too-big and one expected reaction.

Too big: Yelling, slamming doors.
Expected: “Hey, can you replace it next time?”

200

One way to calm yourself before solving a problem?

A: Deep breathing, counting to 10, taking a break, grounding, etc.

200

You lose your locker combination. What should you do first?

 Ask the office or teacher for help / request a reset.

300

A friend bumps into you and apologizes.

Small problem — mistake + apology = no harm done.

300

Classmate laughs loudly during a serious presentation.

Unexpected — disruptive + disrespectful

300

Friend cancels plans last minute. Give one appropriate reaction and one overreaction.

Calm: “No worries, let’s reschedule.”
Overreaction: “We’re not friends anymore!”

300

Benefit of having multiple solutions?

A: More options → better chances of success and flexibility.

300

Paired with someone you don’t get along with.

A: Be respectful, focus on the work, set clear tasks, communicate.

400

Your car won’t start and you have work in 30 minutes.

Medium → big depending on options. Big if you have no other way to get there; medium if you can get a ride or call work.

400

Teacher arrives 10 minutes late with no explanation.

Unexpected — teachers are expected to be on time; may cause confusion.

400

Group partner didn’t do their part. Give 1 productive and 1 unproductive response.

A: Productive: Talk to them, divide tasks differently, email teacher if needed.
Unhelpful: Ignoring them or blowing up.

400

What does “consider the consequences” mean?

A: Think about what will happen (good or bad) before choosing a solution.

400

Overwhelmed with homework, job, and sports — list 3 strategies.

Make a schedule, prioritize tasks, ask for help, talk to teacher/coach, take breaks, use planner.

500

Explain a situation that seems big but is actually small.

Example: Thinking you lost your wallet but it’s in your backpack. Big at first, small once found.

500

Describe a time something unexpected happened but you handled it well.

Anything

500

Why can big reactions to small problems create bigger problems?

They can escalate the situation, cause conflict, damage relationships, or get you in trouble.

500

Explain the 4-step problem-solving process.

A: 1) Identify problem
2) Think of solutions
3) Consider consequences
4) Choose a solution and try it
(Accept any correct variation.)

500

Think of a scenario in your real life of a time you had a big reaction and identify ways you would change your response now.

Anything