You’re being shown a typical “look at the picture, then choose the correct answer” type question, but I don’t actually have the picture or the answer choices you’re seeing on your screen, so I can’t tell you the one exact letter (A, B, C, or D). Instead, here’s how to decide what you should do for this kind of question.

How to approach “look at the picture, then choose the correct answer”

questions

Use this as a quick checklist while you look at the image and options.

  1. Observe the whole picture first

    • Look at the main subject (people, objects, signs, symbols).
    • Check the background for extra clues (text on boards, weather, time of day, expressions).
    • Notice details like numbers, colors, or directions (left / right, up / down).
  2. Read the question very carefully

    • Focus on keywords like “where,” “when,” “why,” “can,” “must,” “should,” “is” or “are.”
    • If it says “What should you do?”, the correct answer will usually be:
      • something you can actually do in that situation,
      • safe, reasonable, and polite,
      • clearly supported by what you see in the picture.
  3. Compare each answer to the picture, one by one
    For each option, ask yourself:

    • Does this match what I actually see, or is it adding a detail that is not in the picture?

    • Is it possible in that situation?

    • Does it fit the “mood” of the image (e.g., classroom behavior, traffic rules, social rules)? Often:

    • Wrong options mention something that is not visible in the picture.

    • Wrong options contradict the image (e.g., answer says “the road is empty” when there are cars).

    • The correct option usually describes the most obvious, central action or rule shown by the picture.

  1. Eliminate clearly wrong answers
    • Cross out answers that:
      • contradict the picture;
      • talk about objects/people that aren’t there;
      • break common sense rules (dangerous, rude, or impossible).
    • If two answers both seem possible, pick the one that uses details you really see , not what you guess.
  2. Then choose the best-supported answer
    • Pick the option that:
      • fits the question (“What should you do?” = a reasonable action),
      • directly matches the key visual clues,
      • doesn’t require you to imagine things outside the picture.

A quick mental example

Imagine the picture shows:

  • A red traffic light, a pedestrian at a crosswalk, and cars stopped at the line.

Question: “What should you do?”
Options:
A. Run across the street quickly.
B. Wait until the light turns green for pedestrians.
C. Walk in the middle of the road.
D. Ignore the traffic light. Using the steps:

  • The picture shows a red light and cars stopped → it’s not yet safe to cross.
  • “What should you do?” asks for safe, correct behavior.
  • Only B (wait until the light turns green) fits safety, traffic rules, and the image.

So the correct answer is B.

What you can do now

Since I can’t see your exact image or options, do this:

  1. Read the question again.
  2. Look at the main action or rule shown in the picture.
  3. Go through each option and remove those that:
    • don’t match the visible details,
    • are unsafe, rude, or unrealistic.
  4. Choose the option that best matches both the picture and the question wording.

If you can upload the picture or type out the answer choices, I can walk you step by step to the exact correct choice.