Emotion + direction (validate briefly, then move to the next step)
Aim (what it achieves)
De-escalate while keeping the boundary: acknowledge feeling, then direct behaviour.
When to use
When a pupil is frustrated, embarrassed, or angry but still within low-level behaviour.
How to use (steps)
Teacher language (examples)
“I can see you’re annoyed. Right now, write the first answer. We’ll sort the rest after.”
Top tips (makes it work)
Keep validation short; don’t argue about the feeling.
Common pitfalls
Over-therapising in the moment; sounding like you’re negotiating the rule.
SEND/PP considerations
Especially effective for SEND pupils with regulation needs. Keep language simple; avoid long emotional discussions mid-lesson.
Tags
Sources
Used in
Behaviour Matrix
- Interrupt & Redirect Work avoidance / blank page / ‘I can’t’
- Interrupt & Redirect Low-level defiance / arguing / ‘No’ (mild)
Related strategies
‘Same expectation, different route’ (alternative compliance path)
Maintain the boundary while offering a non-confrontational way to comply.
Take-up time (instruction, then step away)
Increase compliance by removing the ‘audience’ and pressure.
Positive framing (correct while staying on their side)
Hold the boundary while preserving relationship and motivation.
Micro-choice (bounded options)
Prevent escalation by giving controlled choice without lowering expectations.
Private correction (quiet ‘side script’)
Correct behaviour without creating a public confrontation.
Face-saving exit (thank, move on)
Secure compliance while protecting dignity — reducing escalation and ‘digging in’.