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Goals

The document outlines a presentation on understanding and achieving goals, emphasizing the distinction between short-term and long-term goals. It includes activities for participants to identify their goals, create SMART goals, and develop action plans while addressing motivation and overcoming obstacles. The presentation encourages reflection and celebration of progress in goal-setting.

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Humama Khan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
24 views17 pages

Goals

The document outlines a presentation on understanding and achieving goals, emphasizing the distinction between short-term and long-term goals. It includes activities for participants to identify their goals, create SMART goals, and develop action plans while addressing motivation and overcoming obstacles. The presentation encourages reflection and celebration of progress in goal-setting.

Uploaded by

Humama Khan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Slide 1: Title Slide

Title: Understanding Goals: Your Roadmap to Success

Image: A road with signposts labeled "Short-term" and "Long-term."

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Slide 2: What Are Goals?

Goals are things we want to achieve.

They give us direction and motivation.

Image: A person holding a roadmap or compass.

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Slide 3: Icebreaker Activity – “Guess the Goal!”

Show three images:

1. A student finishing homework


2. A person training for a marathon

3. A child saying, "I want to be an astronaut!"

Ask: Which are short-term and which are long-term goals?

(Encourage discussion.)

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Slide 4: Short-Term Goals

Goals you can achieve quickly (days/weeks).

Examples:

Completing homework

Learning a new word daily


Saving money for a small purchase

Image: A checklist with small tasks marked complete.

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Slide 5: Long-Term Goals

Goals that take months or years to achieve.

Examples:

Becoming a doctor

Learning a new language

Buying a house

Image: A timeline showing progress from "start" to "success."

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Slide 6: Activity – “Your Goals”

Ask participants to write down:

1. One short-term goal

2. One long-term goal

Share with a partner or the group.

Image: A worksheet with "My Short-Term Goal" and "My Long-Term Goal."

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Slide 7: SMART Goals

Goals should be:

Specific (Clear and detailed)


Measurable (Track progress)

Achievable (Realistic)

Relevant (Important to you)

Time-bound (Have a deadline)

Image: A SMART goal checklist.

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Slide 8: Example of a SMART Goal

Not SMART: “I want to get better at math.”

SMART: “I will practice math for 30 minutes daily and improve my grade by the next exam.”

Image: A student studying with a calendar and progress tracker.

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Slide 9: Activity – “Make It SMART”

Give participants a basic goal: "I want to be healthy."


Ask them to make it SMART:

Specific?

Measurable?

Achievable?

Relevant?

Time-bound?

Image: A brainstorming diagram with SMART categories.

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Slide 10: Conclusion & Motivation

Goals help us grow and achieve dreams.

Start small, stay focused, and never give up!

Image: A person reaching the top of a mountain, looking victorious.


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Part I: Setting Your Goals

Slide 1: Title Slide

Title: Setting & Achieving Your Goals

Image: A person standing at a crossroads with signs saying "Dream" and "Plan."

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Slide 2: What Are Goals?

Goals are things we want to achieve.

They help us focus and stay motivated.

Image: A person climbing stairs labeled "Step 1, Step 2, Success."


---

Slide 3: Icebreaker – “What’s Your Dream?”

Show images of different careers (doctor, artist, athlete, scientist).

Ask: What do you want to be when you grow up?

Image: A thought bubble with different dream jobs inside.

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Slide 4: Identifying Strengths & Weaknesses

Knowing what you’re good at helps in goal-setting.

Example:

Strength: Good at writing → Goal: Write a short story

Weakness: Shy → Goal: Speak up in class


Image: A balance scale with "Strengths" and "Weaknesses."

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Slide 5: Activity – Strengths & Weaknesses List

Have students list 3 strengths and 3 weaknesses.

Share one with a partner.

Image: A worksheet with "My Strengths" and "My Weaknesses."

---

Slide 6: Brainstorming Goals (Academic, Personal, Extracurricular)

Academic: Get better at math

Personal: Be more confident

Extracurricular: Join a sports team


Image: A student thinking with thought bubbles of different goals.

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Slide 7: Activity – "Write One Goal in Each Category"

Have students write one goal for each: academic, personal, and extracurricular.

Share one with the group.

Image: A worksheet with three sections: Academic, Personal, Extracurricular.

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Slide 8: Creating a Goal-Setting Worksheet

A good goal worksheet has:

The goal

Why it’s important


Steps to achieve it

Image: A sample goal worksheet with blanks to fill in.

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Part II: Achieving Your Goals

Slide 9: Breaking Big Goals into Smaller Steps

Example: "I want to get better at soccer."

Step 1: Practice 3 times a week

Step 2: Watch training videos

Step 3: Join a team

Image: A staircase with steps leading to a goal.

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Slide 10: Activity – "Break It Down!"

Have students take one goal and write 3 small steps to achieve it.

Share one with a partner.

Image: A checklist with "Step 1, Step 2, Step 3."

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Slide 11: Creating an Action Plan

An action plan includes:

What you need

When you will do it

Who can help

Image: A simple action plan table.


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Slide 12: Activity – "Make Your Action Plan"

Have students choose one goal and make an action plan for it.

Image: A sample action plan with blanks to fill in.

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Slide 13: Staying Motivated

Stay positive and remind yourself why the goal is important.

Find a goal buddy for support.

Image: A person looking at a motivational quote.

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Slide 14: Icebreaker – “Motivation Match”


Show 4 images (someone studying, practicing sports, giving up, celebrating).

Ask: Which person looks motivated? Why?

Image: Different scenarios showing motivation vs. lack of motivation.

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Slide 15: Overcoming Obstacles

Challenges will come, but don’t give up!

Example:

Problem: Too busy → Solution: Create a schedule

Problem: Feeling stuck → Solution: Ask for help

Image: A person jumping over hurdles.

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Slide 16: Activity – "What’s Your Obstacle?"

Have students write a possible challenge for their goal and a way to overcome it.

Image: A worksheet with "Obstacle" and "Solution" columns.

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Slide 17: Celebrating Small Wins

Every small step is progress!

Example: If your goal is to read 10 books, celebrate after finishing each one!

Image: A progress tracker with checkmarks.

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Slide 18: Reflection – “One Thing I Learned”

Ask students: What’s one thing you learned today about goal-setting?

Image: A thought bubble with "Today I learned…"


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Slide 19: Encouragement & Inspiration

Keep working on your goals every day!

Quote: "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step."

Image: A person standing at the start of a path, looking at a goal in the distance.

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Slide 20: Thank You & Final Activity

Ask students: What’s your first step toward your goal?

End with a fun image (e.g., students cheering).

Image: A group of happy students high-fiving.

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Would you like a PowerPoint version of this?

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