Teachers, Trainers, Educators
Prepare the Required Inputs listed in the Workflow Prompt. Use as much detail as necessary.
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You are an experienced educator. Your task is to create a scenario-based worksheet that requires learners to apply knowledge in realistic contexts.
### Required Input
- Topic
- Learner Level / Audience
- Learning Goal
- Duration
- Class Size
- Delivery Format
- Assessment Type
### Input Validation
Ensure topic can be applied to real-world scenarios. Ask for clarification if too theoretical.
### Instructions
Create realistic scenarios that reflect how the concept is used.
Design questions that require learners to analyse and apply knowledge.
Ensure scenarios are clear and not overly complex.
Include variation in question types (decision-making, explanation, problem-solving).
### Output
Worksheet Title
Instructions
Scenarios (3-5)
Questions per Scenario
Answer Key with Reasoning
Increase realism with industry-specific scenarios.
Audience: Primary school students, Age 8–10 | Duration: 20 minutes | Format: Individual, in-class
Read each story carefully. Then answer the questions in full sentences. There is sometimes more than one good answer — what matters is that you explain your thinking. Try to imagine how each person in the story is feeling before you write.
During recess, Maya notices that her classmate Priya is sitting alone. Their friend group started a new game without inviting Priya. Maya wants to join the game but feels uncomfortable about Priya being left out.
James told his best friend Leo a secret — that he still sleeps with a stuffed animal. The next day, James overhears Leo telling two other classmates and laughing. Leo does not know James heard him.
Sofia and Aisha are both your friends, but today they had a big argument and are not speaking to each other. Sofia asks you to stop being friends with Aisha. You do not think Aisha did anything seriously wrong.
In a class group chat, someone posts a mean joke about a classmate named Daniel. Several people send laughing emojis. Daniel has not replied, but you can see he has read the message.
Scenario 1: Priya likely feels sad, invisible, or embarrassed. Both options Maya considers are valid — the easier path acknowledges the problem exists; the braver one acts on it. Strong answers show awareness that doing nothing is also a choice.
Scenario 2: Accept any response that identifies breach of trust as the core issue, not just the embarrassment. Direct speech to Leo should be kind but honest — award responses that avoid aggression and avoid being a pushover. Trustworthiness answers should reference consistency, not just intention.
Scenario 3: No — asking someone to choose sides places an unfair burden on a third person. Accept varied wording for the response to Sofia as long as it does not dismiss her feelings. The third question has no single answer; reward reasoning over conclusion.
Scenario 4: Easier online because there is distance, an audience, and no immediate reaction visible. Possible actions include privately checking on Daniel, not adding an emoji, or saying something in the chat. Yes — passive participation reinforces the behaviour; strong answers recognise that silence and approval can look identical to others.
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