S133 Interrupt & Redirect

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)

1) Name the emotion briefly. 2) State the expectation. 3) Give a concrete next step. 4) Offer a short reset option if needed.

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