Thinking Styles 1
Thinking Styles 2
Match the Thought
Double Answers
Bonus
100

Guessing the meaning of a situation with little to no evidence.

Jumping to conclusions (also called fortune telling)

100

Thinking in extremes such as "always," "never," or "every."

All-or-nothing thinking

100

"They never let me do what I want. It's so unfair!"

All-or-nothing thinking

100

“I forgot one assignment. Now my grade is ruined and my future is basically over.”

Catastrophizing and all-or-nothing thinking

100

Another name for jumping to conclusions.

Fortune telling

200

Assuming that emotions reflect the way things really are.

Emotional reasoning

200

Focusing on only the negative aspects of a situation while ignoring the positive.

Disqualifying the positive

200

“I should understand this right away.”

"Should" statements

200

“If I read out loud and mess up, everyone will laugh and I’ll never have friends.”

Catastrophizing and all-or-nothing thinking

200

“I messed up, so I’m bad at this.”

What is a better way to think about this?

“I made a mistake, but I can improve with practice.”

300

Seeing only the worst possible outcomes of a situation.

Catastrophizing

300
Making broad guesses from one or two events.

Overgeneralization

300

“My teacher looked at me weird—she thinks I’m annoying.”

Mind reading

300

"The teacher corrected me in class. That was so embarrassing. Everyone thinks I’m stupid now."

Mind Reading and personalization

300

“If I fail this, everything is over.”

What is a better way to think about this?

“This matters, but one outcome doesn’t decide everything.”

400

Guessing the thoughts and beliefs of others without adequate evidence.

Mind reading

400
Believing that things should be a certain way.

"Should" statements

400

“I got 4 questions right, but I messed up 1—so today was bad.”

Disqualifying the positive

400

“I got one question wrong on the test. I’m so dumb. I always mess everything up.”

Overgeneralization and labeling

400

“That was so awkward. I ruined everything.”

What is a better way to think about this?

“It felt awkward, but that doesn’t mean it went badly overall.”

500

Exaggerating the importance of events.

Magnification

500

Minimizing the importance of events.

Minimization

500

“I feel nervous, so something bad is going to happen.”

Emotional reasoning

500

“I didn’t get picked for the group. No one ever wants me.”

Overgeneralizing and all-or-nothing thinking

500

“Everyone else is better than me.”

What is a better way to think about this?


“People have different strengths, and I’m still learning.”