Success-first restart (rebuild competence before demand)
Aim (what it achieves)
Reduce avoidance and defiance by giving an immediate, achievable success that re-engages the student with learning.
When to use
After conflict/correction when the pupil is stuck, embarrassed, or refusing; when you need a route back without a battle.
How to use (steps)
Teacher language (examples)
“Start with just the title and the first line.” “Good — now do Q1 only. I’ll check back in two minutes.”
Top tips (makes it work)
Choose a starter that still matches the lesson aim; make it time-bound; don’t present it as a ‘reward’.
Common pitfalls
Lowering expectations permanently; giving an easier task with no route back; announcing ‘special help’ publicly.
SEND/PP considerations
Particularly helpful for SEND/PP pupils with working-memory/literacy barriers or anxiety. Keep it universal in tone: ‘first step for anyone who’s stuck’.
Tags
Sources
- UDL-informed practice (general)
- practice-based
Used in
Behaviour Matrix
- Repair & Rebuild Off-task / fiddling / low-level distraction
Related strategies
Emotion coaching (name–validate–limit–plan)
Help pupils regulate so they can re-enter learning.
Agree a private cue (teacher–pupil signal plan)
Prevent repeat escalation by giving a discreet ‘reset’ signal.
Close the loop (end the episode cleanly)
Prevent grudges and ‘carry-over’ by explicitly signalling that the incident is finished and the relationship is intact.
Co-regulation micro-routine (calm body, calm brain)
Help pupils return to a regulated state so they can comply and learn; reduces escalation driven by dysregulation.
After-sanction learning repair (catch-up the missed learning)
Reduce future disruption by repairing the learning gap that often drives avoidance and acting-out.
Pre-correct next pressure point (after an incident)
Prevent recurrence by privately preparing the pupil for the exact moment they previously struggled with.