Oh, I see what you mean. Well, Nick's answers are good. Is it just that you have to think of actual examples? That shouldn't be too hard. The best way do do this task is to think about what the function of a specific brain area is and, to counter that, what would happen if you no longer had that function or the function was severly impaired.
Like, for damage to the frontal lobe, well, have you ever seen that movie, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, where the guy has a frontal lobotomy? It involves a major personality change and possibly mental retardation. Maybe even a native American suffocating you with your own pillow (lol, don't write that). The frontal lobe plays a part in emotions and in syncronising the brain, so damage to this area may dull emotions and inhibit our ability to perform higher mental functions. So, I guess a real life example would be, if someone with damage to this area was given a puzzle to complete, they wouldn't be able to perform the task.
If someone with damage to the parietal lobe had to catch a ball, they may incorrectly perceive where the ball actually is and fail to catch it.
If someone with damage to the somatosensory cortex were to be pinched, for example, they may not feel it.
As you'll learn later in visual perception, much of the processes involved in seeing happens in the brain. So, if someone had damage to this area they may not be able to see, or their perception would be poor. You could use the example of if they had to read a book, they would have trouble distinguishing the letters or may not even see them at all. This is the same with the visual cortex. It may be a good idea to just come up with a similar sort of example for that one.
With the temporal lobe, that's involved in quite a few processes like memory and recognition of objects. So, if you had damage to this area, you may not be able to recognise someone you know very well.
In Wernicke's area, if someone with damage were to speak to others, they would fail to get the right words out and instead say random things, 'word salad', in other words.
Did that cover everything?