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Interactive COVID-19 Safety Quiz for Kids

Check Kids' COVID-19 Safety Knowledge Now

Difficulty: Moderate
Questions: 20
Learning OutcomesStudy Material

Ready to make learning fun with our kids safety quiz? Joanna Weib invites young explorers to test their COVID-19 quiz skills through engaging, multiple-choice questions. This free quiz helps children identify smart habits and understand virus prevention. Dive into more healthy challenges like the COVID-19 Knowledge Quiz or boost awareness with the General Knowledge and COVID-19 Awareness Quiz. Customize questions easily in our quizzes editor to suit your classroom or home learning!

What is a common symptom of COVID-19 in children and adults?
Itchy skin
Hair loss
Fever
Rash
Fever is a common symptom characterized by elevated body temperature. Itchy skin, hair loss, or rash are not typical primary symptoms of COVID-19.
When should you wash your hands to help prevent spreading COVID-19?
Before bedtime only
Before eating and after playing outside
Only when hands look dirty
Only at the end of the day
Washing hands before eating and after outdoor play removes germs picked up during activities. Washing only at bedtime or when hands are visibly dirty may miss critical moments when virus spread is more likely.
When should you wear a mask to reduce the spread of COVID-19?
When you are in crowded indoor places
When no one is around
Only while sleeping
Only when watching TV
Wearing a mask in crowded indoor settings helps reduce droplet spread. Masks are not needed when alone at home or during sleep and do not serve a purpose when watching television by yourself.
What is the recommended minimum distance to stay from others for social distancing?
12 inches
6 feet or about two arm's lengths
1 foot
2 feet
Maintaining at least six feet distance reduces the chance of breathing in droplets from others. One or two feet is insufficient to prevent droplet transmission, and stating it in inches (12 inches) is the same as one foot, which is not enough.
Which practice helps prevent spread of COVID-19 when you cough or sneeze?
Cough into your hands
Cover your mouth and nose with your elbow
Turn away and cough into the air
Leave your mouth uncovered
Covering coughs with the elbow stops droplets from spreading onto hands and surfaces. Coughing into hands or leaving the mouth uncovered releases droplets freely, and coughing into the air can still infect nearby people.
What is the correct sequence of steps for effective handwashing?
Apply soap, dry, rinse, scrub
Wet hands, apply soap, scrub for 20 seconds, rinse, dry
Rinse, scrub for 5 seconds, apply soap, dry
Scrub, rinse, apply soap, dry
The correct handwashing routine includes wetting hands, lathering with soap, scrubbing for at least 20 seconds, rinsing off soap, and drying. Other orders or insufficient scrubbing time do not effectively remove germs and viruses.
Which of these is NOT a typical symptom of COVID-19?
Shortness of breath
Dry cough
Itchy skin
Fever
COVID-19 commonly causes fever, dry cough, and breathing difficulties but does not typically cause itchy skin. Itchy skin is more associated with allergies or skin conditions rather than respiratory viruses.
How should a well-fitting cloth mask sit on your face?
Covers both nose and mouth and fits snugly on the sides
Only covers your mouth
Hangs below your nose
Fits loosely with big gaps
A proper cloth mask covers the nose and mouth completely and sits snugly against the face to block droplets. Gaps or hanging below the nose allow unfiltered air and droplets to escape or enter.
In a playground setting, how can you practice social distancing with friends?
Stand two feet apart
Keep at least six feet between you and your friends
Share toys without cleaning
Sit closely on the same bench
Keeping six feet apart minimizes close contact that spreads droplets. Standing only two feet apart, sitting close together, or sharing unclean toys increases the risk of transmission.
Why is practicing good hygiene important to protect against viruses?
It is unnecessary if you feel healthy
It only makes your hands smell nice
It replaces the need to wear masks
It helps remove germs and prevents you from getting sick
Good hygiene, like washing and sanitizing, helps remove or kill pathogens before they infect you. It does not replace masks or only serve cosmetic purposes, and it remains important even when you feel well.
When you return home from outside, what safe behavior should you do first?
Remove your shoes at the door and wash your hands
Go straight to bed
Share snacks without washing hands
Keep shoes on and wash later in the day
Removing shoes and washing hands immediately stops germs brought in from outside. Postponing washing, going to bed, or sharing snacks without cleaning risks spreading viruses and dirt.
What should you do with your cloth mask after using it outside?
Wash it with soap and water before reusing
Store it in your pocket unclean
Throw it on the floor in your room
Fold it and keep without washing
Reusable masks need washing with soap and water to remove germs before wearing again. Folding without washing or leaving in pockets allows germs to accumulate and spread.
At the grocery store, which habit reduces the chance of catching COVID-19?
Stand directly behind someone in line
Use hand sanitizer after touching the shopping cart
Touch your face while shopping
Skip wearing a mask
Using hand sanitizer reduces germs from surfaces like cart handles. Touching your face, not wearing a mask, or crowding directly behind someone increases risk of exposure.
Which describes the importance of covering your cough?
It stops you from hearing your voice loudly
It lets you breathe cleaner air
It helps prevent respiratory droplets from reaching others
It increases droplet spread
Covering a cough uses a barrier to trap droplets that could contain viruses. It does not affect breathing air quality or your voice volume, and it definitely does not increase spread.
Why is it important to avoid touching your face, especially eyes, nose, and mouth?
To keep your face dry
To show good manners
To prevent wrinkles
To stop germs on your hands from entering your body
Hands can carry germs, and touching the face provides them an entry point. Avoiding face touching does not relate to wrinkles, dryness, or manners but to health protection.
You do not have access to soap and water. What should you use to clean your hands effectively?
Baby oil
Hand cream
Plain water only
Hand sanitizer with at least 60% alcohol
Alcohol-based hand sanitizer with at least 60% alcohol kills most viruses when soap and water aren't available. Water alone, baby oil, or hand cream do not disinfect and may leave germs on your skin.
Two friends are standing four feet apart indoors. Which additional precaution should they take to further reduce COVID-19 risk?
Remove masks since they are spaced apart
Share a straw to drink from
Both wear well-fitting masks while indoors
Yell loudly to clear the air
Even with some distancing indoors, wearing masks adds a physical barrier that reduces aerosol spread. Yelling, removing masks, or sharing items increases the chance of transmission.
A group of students wants to share snacks safely during a study session. What is the best practice?
Eat snacks without washing hands
Share spoons and plates continuously
Provide individual snack portions instead of sharing from a common bowl
Pass around a single bowl for everyone to take handfuls
Individual portions limit cross-contact and reduce germ spread. Sharing from a common bowl or sharing utensils without cleaning increases the risk of transferring viruses between people.
Why do health guidelines recommend scrubbing hands for at least 20 seconds during washing?
It allows time for soap to break down and remove the virus's lipid envelope
It makes your hands warmer
It ensures soap changes color
It is the time it takes to dry your hands
Scrubbing for 20 seconds ensures soap molecules can properly break up the virus's protective lipid coating. The guidelines are not based on hand warmth, drying time, or color changes in soap.
In a classroom where plexiglass shields are installed at desks, which behavior still must be practiced?
Wearing masks and keeping desks spaced apart
Removing masks behind the shield
Sharing pens without cleaning
Ignoring handwashing since shields exist
Plexiglass shields reduce direct droplet spread but masks and spacing continue to be essential for full protection. Neglecting handwashing, sharing unclean pens, or removing masks compromises safety despite the presence of barriers.
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Learning Outcomes

  1. Identify common COVID-19 symptoms and prevention methods
  2. Demonstrate proper handwashing and mask-wearing techniques
  3. Apply social distancing guidelines in everyday scenarios
  4. Evaluate the importance of good hygiene in virus protection
  5. Analyse safe behaviors to reduce COVID-19 spread

Cheat Sheet

  1. Recognize common COVID-19 symptoms in children - Put on your detective hat to spot fever, cough, and fatigue early - it helps you act fast and keep little ones safe. Early detection can stop the virus in its tracks and prevent classwide germ parties. COVID in Children
  2. Understand the importance of proper handwashing - Imagine you're scrubbing off invisible germs with your favorite bubble-blowing song. A solid 20-second soap dance after sneezes or playground adventures keeps those pesky viruses at bay. Coronavirus in Babies & Kids
  3. Practice correct mask-wearing - Teach kids that a snug mask covering both nose and mouth is like a superhero shield against viral villains. No gaps mean maximum protection during school days and playdates. Avoidance of COVID-19 for Children and Adolescents and Isolation Precautions
  4. Maintain social distancing - Keeping a six-foot bubble around you is like having your own personal force field in crowds. This simple trick helps stop germs from doing the limbo between friends and classmates. COVID-19 in babies and children
  5. Recognize the role of vaccinations - Think of vaccines as friendly bodyguards training immune cells to spot and fight COVID-19 bullies. Safe, effective, and now available for kids - getting vaccinated can mean smoother school years ahead. Why You Should Vaccinate Your Kids Against COVID-19
  6. Be aware of less common symptoms - Keep an eye out for unusual signs like tummy troubles or a rash - these sneaky clues could mean COVID-19 is playing hide-and-seek. Early recognition leads to faster care and fewer surprises on your health journey. COVID-19 Symptoms in Kids: What to Know
  7. Understand the importance of good ventilation - Opening windows or using air filters gives indoor air a breath of fresh, germ-fighting life. Good airflow can clear airborne viruses and make your home or classroom safer and more inviting. COVID-19 in babies and children
  8. Recognize the signs of MIS-C - Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children is rare but serious - watch for fever spikes, abdominal pain, or rash. Spotting these red flags early means faster medical attention and better outcomes. COVID-19 Symptoms in Kids: What to Know
  9. Stay informed about COVID-19 variants - Variants keep remixing the virus playlist, so staying updated helps you tweak your safety dance moves. Learning about new strains means smarter masks, better spacing, and fewer surprises in the schoolyard. How Will Delta and COVID-19 Change This Back-to-School Season? Here's What to Know
  10. Encourage open communication with children - Chatting honestly about COVID-19 turns scary unknowns into manageable facts - think of it as building a safety toolkit together. Encouraging questions and giving clear answers builds resilience and good habits for life. Coronavirus in Babies & Kids
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