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Multiple choice quiz covering topics related to self-esteem, optimism, self-awareness, and needs.

Multiple Choice Quiz with four questions on self-esteem, attitude, self-awareness, and needs, featuring options A, B, C, and D for each question.

Multiple Choice Quiz with four questions on self-esteem, attitude, self-awareness, and needs, featuring options A, B, C, and D for each question.

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Show Answer Key & Explanations Step-by-step solution for: Multiple Choice Quiz Free Google Docs Template - gdoc.io
Let’s go through each question one by one.

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Question 1: Good self esteem helps you to have what around others?

Self-esteem is how much you value and respect yourself. When you have good self-esteem, you feel good about who you are. That makes it easier to be sure of yourself when you’re with other people — that’s called confidence.

- Optimism (B) is about expecting good things in the future — not directly about being around others.
- Mood swings (C) are emotional ups and downs — not helped by self-esteem; sometimes low self-esteem causes them.
- Self-concept (D) is your overall idea of yourself — related, but not specifically what you “have around others.”

So, the best answer is A. Confidence

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Question 2: Having a positive attitude towards your future, means that you are...

If you think good things will happen in your future, that’s called being optimistic.

- Resilient (A) means bouncing back from hard times — important, but not exactly about having a positive view of the future.
- Vibing (B) is slang for feeling good or relaxed — too casual and not precise.
- Confident (D) is believing in yourself — close, but optimism is more about hope for the future.

Correct answer: C. Optimistic

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Question 3: Self-awareness includes knowing about my...

Self-awareness means understanding yourself — your feelings, thoughts, strengths, weaknesses, likes, dislikes, etc.

- Strengths (A) — yes
- Weaknesses (B) — yes
- Hobbies (C) — also part of knowing yourself

So if all three are true, then...

Answer: D. All of the above

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Question 4: What is a “Need”?

A “need” is something essential for survival or basic well-being — like food, water, shelter, clothing.

- A boat (A) — nice to have, but not necessary for everyone.
- Flowers (B) — pretty, but not needed to live.
- Food (C) — YES! You must eat to survive.
- Clothes (D) — also a need in most places (for protection and society), BUT... wait — let’s check carefully.

Actually, both food and clothes can be considered needs. But looking at the options, we have to pick the *best* single answer. In many school contexts, especially elementary level, food is taught as the most basic human need — along with water and air.

But hold on — option D is “Clothes”. Is clothes always a need? Technically, in some climates or cultures, minimal clothing might suffice — but still, society generally considers clothing a basic need.

However, note: this is multiple choice with only ONE correct answer expected. Let’s compare:

→ Food is universally required for biological survival.
→ Clothes are socially/culturally necessary in most places, but not biologically essential in all cases (e.g., warm climates).

In standard curriculum, food is listed first among basic needs.

Also, look at the distractors: boat and flowers are clearly wants. Between food and clothes — both are needs, but food is more fundamental.

Wait — actually, rechecking: in many textbooks, the basic needs are: food, water, shelter, clothing. So both C and D could be argued.

But since the question says “What is a ‘Need’?” and gives four options where only one is correct, and food is unambiguously a need while clothes might be debated in edge cases — and given that “food” is option C — I think the intended answer is C. Food.

Alternatively — maybe the test expects us to know that “needs” vs “wants”: food = need, boat/flowers = wants, clothes = need? Hmm.

Actually — let me double-check common definitions used in schools:

Typical lesson:
Needs: food, water, shelter, clothing
Wants: toys, games, fancy stuff

So both C and D are needs? But the quiz likely has only one correct answer per question.

Looking again at the options:

A. A boat → want
B. Flowers → want
C. Food → need
D. Clothes → need

Uh oh — two correct answers? That can’t be right for a multiple-choice quiz unless specified.

Wait — perhaps in this context, they consider “clothes” as a want? No, that doesn’t make sense.

Maybe there's a trick. Let’s read the question again: “What is a ‘Need’?”

It’s singular — so they want one example of a need.

Both C and D are valid, but which one is MORE fundamentally a need?

Biologically: food > clothes. You can survive without clothes in warm weather, but not without food.

Also, in Maslow’s hierarchy, physiological needs (like food) come before safety/security (which includes clothing/shelter).

Therefore, food is the most basic need here.

Moreover, in many standardized tests for younger students, “food” is the go-to example of a need.

Final decision: C. Food

*(Note: If this were a real classroom, I’d ask the teacher why clothes isn’t also accepted — but based on typical grading, food is the safest answer.)*

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Final Answer:
1. A
2. C
3. D
4. C
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of mulitlpe choice.
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