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Free Age-Group Intervention Guide.
Age-appropriate classroom intervention strategies for preschool (3–6), primary (7–12), and secondary (13–18). Because a 4-year-old and a 16-year-old need different approaches.
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15 strategies across three age groups.
Every strategy is classroom-tested, developmentally appropriate, and designed to be implemented by teachers without specialized training.
Preschool Interventions (Ages 3–6)
Morning Emotion Check-in
Use feeling cards to help children identify and express emotions.
Play-Based Social Skills
Structured play activities that practice sharing and turn-taking.
Transition Support Routines
Songs and visual cues to smooth difficult transitions.
Calm Corner Setup
A designated space with sensory tools for self-regulation.
Positive Reinforcement
Sticker system for celebrating small wins and desired behaviors.
Primary Interventions (Ages 7–12)
Structured Peer Pairing
Intentional pairing activities that build social confidence.
Attention-Friendly Seating
Strategic seating arrangements that reduce distractions.
Emotion Journaling
Guided prompts for students to reflect on their feelings.
Classroom Breathing Exercises
Simple breathing techniques for collective calm.
Achievement Celebrations
Rituals that recognize effort, not just outcomes.
Secondary Interventions (Ages 13–18)
Weekly 1-on-1 Check-ins
Structured conversation guides for individual student meetings.
Stress Management Toolkit
Distributable tools students can use independently.
Academic Pressure Monitoring
Tracking systems to identify stress before it escalates.
Peer Support Groups
Facilitated groups where students support each other.
Autonomy-Respecting Goals
Student-led goal setting that honors their independence.
Why age-appropriate intervention matters.
Using a preschool strategy with a teenager feels patronizing. Using a teen strategy with a 5-year-old is developmentally inappropriate. This guide ensures every intervention meets children where they are — developmentally, emotionally, and socially.
Sample Preview
Preview the guide.
Guided emotion journaling helps students identify, name, and process their feelings — building emotional vocabulary and self-awareness over time.
- 1Introduce the journal as a private, judgment-free space.
- 2Provide a daily prompt card (e.g., “Today I felt ____ because ____”).
- 3Allow 5 minutes at the start or end of class for journaling.
- 4Review journals weekly — look for patterns, not corrections.
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Get instant access to all 15 age-appropriate intervention strategies as a PDF.