Re-state expectation once (no multiple warnings)
Aim (what it achieves)
Reduce ‘nagging’ cycles and make directions meaningful.
When to use
When you notice yourself repeating the same request; when pupils learn to wait you out.
How to use (steps)
Teacher language (examples)
“Pens down and eyes on me.” (then wait, scan, continue)
Top tips (makes it work)
Silence after the direction is powerful. Your follow-up should be calm and consistent.
Common pitfalls
Repeating endlessly; adding emotion; bargaining.
SEND/PP considerations
Useful for pupils who struggle with processing: pair with a gesture/visual cue; keep wording consistent lesson to lesson.
Tags
Sources
Used in
Behaviour Matrix
- Interrupt & Redirect Chatting during teacher talk / instruction
- Interrupt & Redirect Disorganisation / missing equipment / dead time
Related strategies
Pause and scan (hold the space)
Use calm silence to reset attention and stop chatter spreading.
Reset the room (10–20 second whole-class reset)
Stop ‘spread’ of chatter and restore calm without drama.
Attention signal + countdown
Regain whole-class attention quickly and predictably.
Pre-correction (prime expectations before the moment)
Prevent predictable slip-ups by reminding pupils of the expected behaviour right before a high-risk moment.
30‑second structured partner reset (re-engage without confrontation)
Shifts a drifting or chatty class back to learning by giving talk a short, controlled purpose and a clear stop.
Proximity and presence
Stop low-level disruption without breaking teaching flow.