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10 questions
You are in the red zone and a friend wants to resolve a conflict with you. You should:
yell at them until they leave you alone
roll your eyes and walk away
ignore them completely
tell them you are not ready to talk yet
You are feeling frustrated by someone else's behavior. You should:
use an I statement to explain how you feel ('I feel...')
grumble under your breath and hope they get the point
complain to someone else about them
accuse them of being annoying ('You are...')
Which is true about conflicts?
The more people you involve, the better.
Talking behind someone's back really helps.
Asking to speak directly with the person you are mad at is a good first step.
It's a good idea to tell all of your friends what the someone did to upset you, so they can be mad with you.
Active listening is:
All of these!
Listening carefully to the other person's words.
Taking time to understand the other person's perspective.
Being patient and not interrupting.
What type of resolution is best?
Lose-Lose (no one gets what they want)
Win-Lose (only one person gets what they want)
Win-Win (both people benefit)
No resolution (conflict continues)
Blaming, yelling, avoiding, and eye rolling are:
Great ideas for problem solving
Common roadblocks to problem solving
Helpful during active listening
Ways to make a new friend
What is reporting?
The same as tattling
The same as snitching
Getting help from someone to solve a problem
Trying to get someone in trouble
Joe and Rashaad are good friends. During PE, Joe often makes jokes about Rashaad. Joe laughs and thinks it's funny, but it is starting to bother Rashaad. What should Rashaad do?
Hope Joe stops on his own.
Ask an adult to handle it for him.
Say something mean back to Joe next time.
Let Joe know that it's starting to bother him and ask him to stop.
Ana and Kim are in the same class. During group work, Ana kept talking over Kim. Ana had a lot to say, but Kim felt like she wasn't getting a chance to share her thoughts. Kim should:
Talk louder so Ana gets the point.
Say something like, 'Ana, I'm feeling frustrated when you talk while I'm talking because I'm not getting a chance to share. I need you to wait your turn please.'
Give up trying and sit quietly.
Raise your hand so your teacher will come deal with it.
A family member keeps doing something that is really upsetting you. What could you do to solve the problem?
All of these!
Approach them calmly and ask to talk about it.
Use a strategy to get out of the red zone before bringing it up.
Use 'I statements' to explain how you feel and what you would like to be different.
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