Student can describe decision-making using decide, choose, prefer, consider, weigh, and evaluate.
Introduction to decision-making vocabulary
Imagine you are standing at the school gates. You need to get home, and you have a choice: do you walk or take the bus?
Before you make a move, you already have a feeling about which one you prefer—meaning you like it better than the other because of your personal tastes.
Visual anchors for decision-making terms
An educational infographic in a 2x4 grid showing eight hand-drawn style doodles with labels: 1. Decide (a judge's wooden…
Order the logical steps of making a decision
Arrange the decision-making steps in their logical, chronological order.
Fill in blanks with decision-making terms
When choosing a project topic, you should first all the available options before making up your mind. If your first plan does not work out, it is wise to have an plan ready. Many students studying in a quiet library rather than a noisy cafeteria. Teachers spend time different science projects to see which one is the most creative. Making decisions is easier when you think about your choices carefully.
Identify the decision-making stage from a description
If you write down a list of positive features (+) and negative features (-) for two different bicycle models, what action are you performing?
Write a short paragraph explaining a decision process
Make sure to use our core decision-making vocabulary words: consider, weigh, alternative, and decide in your short paragraph.
Identify the two competing choices.
Write three sentences showing how you think through this choice.
Flashcards for decision-making vocabulary