30‑second structured partner reset (re-engage without confrontation)
Aim (what it achieves)
Shifts a drifting or chatty class back to learning by giving talk a short, controlled purpose and a clear stop.
When to use
When many pupils are off-task; after a transition; when attention is slipping but you want to avoid escalating temperature.
How to use (steps)
Teacher language (examples)
“30 seconds: tell your partner the first step.” “Stop—eyes on me. Now write it.”
Top tips (makes it work)
Keep it short and academic. Use it as a reset, not a reward. Follow immediately with writing to anchor focus.
Common pitfalls
Letting it run too long. Using vague prompts. Not stopping cleanly (noise lingers).
SEND/PP considerations
For anxious pupils, allow them to read from a note. Use sentence stems for everyone. Avoid forcing a vulnerable pupil to speak publicly straight after.
Tags
Sources
Used in
Behaviour Matrix
- Interrupt & Redirect Off-task / fiddling / low-level distraction
Related strategies
Pre-correction (prime expectations before the moment)
Prevent predictable slip-ups by reminding pupils of the expected behaviour right before a high-risk moment.
Structured movement reset (Stand–Pair–Return)
Resets attention and energy using controlled movement, preventing escalation from restlessness or low-level disruption.
Proximity and presence
Stop low-level disruption without breaking teaching flow.
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.