which of the following is an example of a smart goal?
An example of a SMART goal is:
“Increase my math test score from 70% to 85% by the end of the next grading
period by studying 45 minutes every weekday using practice tests and review
guides.”
What a SMART goal includes
A SMART goal contains five key elements:
- Specific: Clearly states what you want (e.g., “increase my math test score”).
- Measurable: Has a number you can track (from 70% to 85%).
- Achievable: Realistic given your time and ability (a 15% increase with regular study).
- Relevant: Matters to your bigger objective (improving grades or preparing for college).
- Time-bound: Has a clear deadline (by the end of the next grading period).
Simple pattern you can copy
Use this structure to recognize or create SMART goals in multiple‑choice questions:
- “I will [specific result] from X to Y
- by [deadline or time frame]
- by [concrete actions and frequency].”
For example, “I will walk 30 minutes five days a week to lose 5 pounds in the next 6 weeks” is also a SMART goal, because it is specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound.
If you share the answer choices you are given, it is possible to point out exactly which one is the SMART goal and briefly explain why.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.