
The Meaning and Types of Life Skills
Explain the meaning and types of life skills
A skill is the ability of an individual to apply his/her mental and 
physical power to control the environment. It involves things like 
thinking, playing and implementation so as to solve social, political, 
economic and culture problems. These skills are the ability to 
understand one self, build sound relationships with others, survive 
under difficult circumstances, act responsibly and safely, and solve 
problems. It addresses the balance between knowledge, attitude and 
skills.
Need for life skills
As children develop, their life begins to change. Adolescents may 
develop a variety of life skills to prepare them to face challenges, 
take up family responsibility, make decisions and think about what they 
want to be in the future. Life skills education addresses these issues 
for the benefit of the individual and society at large. Life skills 
equip adolescents with knowledge and attitudes that should lead to the 
requirement behavior. They reduce health risk and raise awareness on 
health and related behavior such as sexual abuse, drug abuse, violence, 
drunkenness, unwanted pregnancy, sexual transmitted infections (STIs) 
and HIV/AIDS. Life skills play a decisive role in helping to prevent 
these behaviors and enlightening teenagers about these challenges so 
that they can protect themselves.
Types of Life Skills
There are three major types of life skills. These are: individual life 
skills, social skills and effective decision- making skills.
Individual life skills
The ability of a person to know and understand personal feelings, 
emotions, strengths, weaknesses as well as the position in life and 
society. It is also the ability of an individual to have a clear vision 
of self-identity of where he/she come from and culture which has shaped 
him/her.
The importance of Individual life skills
Individual skill is very important in building self- esteem and self- 
confidence as a person becomes aware of his/her own capabilities and 
position in the community. The more individual is aware of personal 
capabilities, the more capable he/she is of using those skills 
effectively and be able to make choices which are consistent with the 
opportunities available in the society which one lives. Individual life 
skills include self-awareness, ability to cope with stress, with 
emotions and assertiveness.
(a). Self-awareness
Awareness is the ability of knowing things. Thus self- awareness is the 
ability of an individual to know himself or herself, his or her 
feelings, emotions, strengths and weaknesses. This skill enables a 
person to ask important questions about himself or herself.
Evaluate yourself
Ask yourself the following questions and try to answer them.
- Who am I and what is my role in the society?
- What do I like, what are my dislikes and why?
- What makes me happy, what makes me unhappy and why?
(b). Copying with stress
Stress is a mental, emotional or physical tension or pressure. It can be
 caused by the events such as examinations, divorce, death of a family 
member or a friend or problems in the family. A person needs to develop 
skills that help him or her to cope with stress. Evaluate yourself: 
Let’s say you have failed in your annual examinations:
- Would you be happy with the results? Why?
- Would your parents be happy with the results? Why?
- Would you be able to explain the results to other people? Why?
- How would you cope with this situation?
(c). Copying with emotions
Emotions are strong feelings such as love, the desire to be accepted, 
fear, anger shyness and disgust. The ability to handle emotions enables a
 person to control his/her strong feelings and actions. Evaluate 
yourself. Let’s say you are too shy to ask or answer questions in class:
- How would you feel about this situation? Why?
- How would your fellow students react to this behaviour during the lesson?
- How would you overcome your shyness?
(d). Assertiveness
Assertiveness is the ability of a person to know what he/she wants and 
why, and be able to take necessary steps to achieve it. An assertive 
person is able to express his or her opinions or desires strongly and 
with confidence. However in achieving what he/she wants the person has 
to consider rights of others. Evaluate yourself; Let’s say you are 
having a debate session in school. The motion is, `Teachers should build
 laboratories for practical training in the school. ` You are proposing 
this motion. How can you convince the other students to support your 
side?
Social skills
This is the ability to understand and live in peace and harmony with 
others. These are skills for the development of positive interpersonal 
relationships with friends, family members, peers, people in authority 
and adults. Social life skills can be developed through the following:
(a). Building positive relationships with others
This is the ability of a person to meet and relate with others in 
various places such as schools, playing field and social gathering. 
Relationships can be between children and parents or students and 
teachers. They can also be between relatives, neighbours or peers. Being
 able to form healthy relationships enables one to know how to behave 
properly in each relationship.
(b). Peer resistance
Peer pressure iswhen one's peers/friends influence another person to do 
something. Our friends can influence us to do good or bad things. For 
example, positive peer pressure can lead to you to work harder in school
 and improve your grades. Negative peer pressure can cause you to engage
 in wrong activities, such as drugabusing andescaping from school. Such 
bad behavior will get you into trouble with your teachers and parents. 
No one wants to have a friend who can lead one into problems. Peer 
resistance helps an individual to take control of him/herself by 
resisting negative influences from others. Evaluate yourself:
- Have you ever been influenced by your friends to do something?Elaborate
- Was it good or bad?
- What did you do when you were influenced to do bad things?
(c). Empathy
This is the ability to understand other people`s feelings and to feel 
concerned about their problems. When you empathize, you imagine yourself
 in the other people`s situation. This skill enables us to share our 
friend’s problems. Evaluate yourself:
- How do you feel when your best friend is faced with problems?
- Imagine your friend has failed the civic test. Say how you would feel and what can you do to help him/her?
(d). Negotiation
This is the ability to agree on issues without undermining or going 
against one’s principles. It is an important skill when disagreements 
occur. Negotiation skills build good understanding. Evaluate yourself. 
Imagine your friend wants you to discuss mathematics with him/her while 
you wanted to discuss civics. How would you negotiate with him/her so 
that both of you can agree?
(e).Effective communication
This is the ability of a person to communicate with people according to 
their mood, age and background. It includes speaking, reading, listening
 and writing skills. This skill is very important in maintaining good 
relationship with other people. Speaking correctly means saying what you
 want in a way that can be easily and clearly understood. Evaluate 
yourself;
- Do you talk to your parents the same way you talk to your younger brother or sister? Why?
- How do you talk to your best friend when he/she is happy? How do you talk to him/her when he or she is sad?
Effective decision-making skills
These skills enable a person to make good decisions. The following are 
the aspects of effective decision-making skills: Critical thinking, 
creative thinking, problem-solving and decision-making.
(a).Critical thinking
This is the ability of a person to develop a deep understanding of 
something. It helps a person to understand the environment in which 
he/she lives and problems which might prevent him or her from making 
proper decisions. Before making a decision, a critical thinker considers
 the advantages and disadvantages of various ways of doing something. 
Critical thinker helps a person to come up with ideas to solve problems.
 Evaluate yourself What problems does your school face? Can you find out
 their cause? Have you ever thought of how to solve them?
(b). Creative thinking
This is the ability to think and come up with new ideas and ways of 
doing things. In life, creative thinking helps an individual to come up 
with solutions that other people had not thought of. Evaluate yourself
- Have you found problems at your school or home which other people did not know of?
- Were you able to suggest solutions that other people had not thought of?
(c). Decision-making
This is the ability to make the best choice out of many available 
options. The choice is made after considering its results. In life, it 
is important to think about consequences before making a decision. 
Evaluate yourself; Imagine your pen cannot write and you do not have 
money to buy a new one. How do you solve this problem?
Sources of life skills
People learn life skills from different sources. The following are the major ones.
- Family: Parents, guardians and other relatives are primary source from whom we learn different life skills.
- Neighbors: We learn the different ways that people live from our neighbors. Good neighbors help us to behave well.
- Friends: Friends helps us to acquire various life skills. Exchanging good ideas with friends help to mold us in to well-behaved individuals.
- Schools: The good education we get at school enables us to develop skills for life.
- Society: the way people live in the society allows an individual to learn what is expected of him/her and how he/she should behave in different circumstances.
- Religion: Good religion teachings help to get skills which enable us to live harmoniously in society Note: The above mentioned sources of life skills are sources of positive and progressive life skills.
The Importance of Life Skills
Illustrate the importance of life skills
Life skills are very important because they help develop abilities which
 are necessary for making life better. Some of the things that these 
skills enable us to do include:
- Make proper decisions in life on different matters, like friendships, whichsubjects to studyin school and whatcareer to pursue.
- Develop good behavior. Through social skills, a person is able to avoid bad friends and anti-social behavior such as smoking, drug abuse, abusing alcohol and getting into premature sexual relationships.
- Increase love and understanding for other people because of good social skills.
- Respond effectively to different situations. Through life skills, a person is able to handle unfortunate occurrences such as divorce, death of friends or relatives, examination pressure or any form of harassment or intimidation.
- Maintain peace and order. Negotiation skills enable people to solve their problems peacefully. This helps prevent conflict.
- Understand the environment and ways to fit in it because you have skills to solve any problem around you. It also helps to maintain the culture of your community.
How to Use Social Skills
Demonstrate how to use social skills
Social skills help a person to know and live with others peacefully. 
They give a person knowledge and ability to live a better life with 
other people in the society. Social skills consist of the ability to 
form good relationship with other people, make good friends, show 
empathy, exhibit peer resistance, negotiate effectively and have 
effective communication. We can use social skills in the following ways:
- Forming relationship with other people - This skill enables one to know how to behave in each relationship. It helps a person to behave properly according to the prevailing situation.
- Making good friends – A person can use this skill to make good friends. Good friends are those who: (i). Respect and assist us, our parents, relatives and elders (ii). Go to school and school rules. (iii). Assist each other when in problems (iv). Correct each other when one misbehave
- Showing empathy – this is the ability to feel what others are going through, especially when they are experiencing problems. This social skill enables one to understand other people’s problems and show feelings. It enables a person to take part in finding out ways to solve other people’s problems.
- Exhibiting peer resistance – A person who have proper social skills is able to resist bad influences from his/her peers or friends. Such a person does not do things that are unacceptable to society, for example fighting, prostitution, theft and truancy.
- Displaying effective communication – Proper communication can be used to establish good relationships with others people. It is through effective speaking, writing and listening that a person can establish relationships with others.
- Problem – solving – This is the social skill that enables a person to make a proper decisions in difficult times.
Consequences of not Applying Social Skills
Analyse the consequences of not applying social skills
Failure to apply life skills can lead to problems. Some of these problems are:
- Improper choices: People may make wrong choices in their education and future careers. A person may find him/herself make wrong choices by studying subjects which he/she cannot fit in.
- Bad behavior: People may develop bad behavior. For example, the youth may not respect their parents, teacher and elders, due to negative peer pressure. They may also get into drug abuse or stealing.
- Conflicts: Conflicts can occur due to lack of negotiation skills. Such conflicts could be among students, in families, in communities or between countries.
- Poverty: Poverty may occur or increase due to lack of proper decision-making in the society or country. Lack of creative skills to bring about development.
- Poor leadership: Lack of good communication between leaders and the citizens can lead to poor leadership.
- Lack of empathy: Lack of empathy may lead to increased suffering for those who have problems as those who do not have problems may not understand their circumstances.
Exercise 1
Exercise 2
Fill in the blanks.
- The ability of a person to communicate with others while considering their mood, age and back ground is called------------------------
- --------, --------, and -------- are the primary source from whom we learn different life skills.
- --------------------is the ability to make the best choice out of many available options.
- The ability of a person to resist negative influences from 
- others is called--------.
- Lack of negotiation skills may lead to -------------
- READ TOPIC 3: Human Rights
 
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