Teacher Prompt Template

Student intervention plan Prompt for Teachers

A structured AI prompt template that configures any large language model to act as a class teacher and SENCO collaborating on a targeted support plan. Paste it into ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini to get professional-quality student intervention plan output every time.

Why Student intervention plan prompts matter for Teachers

When you ask an AI model a vague question, you get a vague answer. The most common mistake teachers make is treating an AI like a search engine — sending a single-sentence request and hoping for a structured, expert-level response. It rarely works.

A well-structured student intervention plan prompt does three things: it gives the AI a specific expert role to adopt (in this case, a class teacher and SENCO collaborating on a targeted support plan), it provides the contextual framing needed to understand your situation, and it specifies exactly how the output should be organised. The result is output you can actually use — not output you need to spend thirty minutes editing into something useful.

What this prompt generates

When you use this template, the AI will organise its student intervention plan response around 6 structured sections. Each one is designed to give you immediately usable output — not generic advice you need to interpret.

  1. Student profile — strengths and identified barriers
  2. SMART intervention targets
  3. Strategies and support to be implemented
  4. Staff responsibilities and timeline
  5. Review date and success criteria
  6. Parent communication plan

The output will be written in a supportive, specific, and evidence-informed style — calibrated for the audience and decisions a teacher typically faces.

Example prompt

Here is what a prompt built by this template looks like. You provide a short description of your situation; the template handles the role, framing, and output format automatically.

You are a class teacher and SENCO collaborating on a targeted support plan.

My task: Student intervention plan. Context: I am teaching Year 9 Science. The lesson topic is photosynthesis and the class has mixed ability levels.

Please structure your response using these sections: Student profile, SMART intervention targets, Strategies and support to be implemented, Staff responsibilities and timeline, Review date and success criteria, Parent communication plan.

Paste a prompt like this into ChatGPT (GPT-4o), Claude (3.5 Sonnet or higher), or Gemini Advanced and you will receive a structured, expert-level student intervention plan document — not a paragraph of generalities.

How to use this template on PromptEvolution

PromptEvolution builds and refines this prompt for you automatically. You do not need to copy and edit template text manually.

  1. Open the prompt builder.
  2. Select “Teacher from the profession dropdown.
  3. Choose “Student intervention plan from the task list.
  4. Add your context in the text area — describe what you are working on for student intervention plan, any constraints, and your target audience.
  5. Click Generate to get an optimised, context-enriched prompt ready to paste into any AI model.
  6. Copy and use the output directly in ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or any other LLM.

Tips for sharper student intervention plan results

  • Be specific in the context field. The more detail you provide about your situation — the audience, constraints, and what you have already tried — the more targeted the output will be.
  • Name your constraints explicitly. If you have a word limit, a deadline, a particular format requirement, or a stakeholder audience, include it. Constraints help the AI prioritise.
  • Iterate, do not start over. If the first output is close but not quite right, paste it back in with a note on what to change rather than generating from scratch.
  • Use the full output. Each section in the structured output exists for a reason. If a section does not apply to you, trim it — but read it first. It often surfaces an angle you had not considered.

Frequently asked questions

Which AI models work best with this student intervention plan prompt?

This template is designed to work with any instruction-following large language model. In practice, GPT-4o, Claude 3.5 Sonnet or later, and Gemini 1.5 Pro all produce strong results. GPT-4o and Claude tend to follow the structured output format most reliably. If you are on a free plan, GPT-4o mini and Claude Haiku can still produce useful output — the depth of each section will be shallower, but the structure will hold.

Can I customise the output sections?

Yes. The 6sections above are the default template, but you can instruct the AI to add, remove, or rename sections by appending a note to the prompt. For example: “Replace the Parent communication plansection with a risks and assumptions table.” The model will adapt its structure accordingly. PromptEvolution’s context field is also a good place to specify format preferences before the prompt is generated.

Is this better than writing my own student intervention plan prompt from scratch?

For most teachers, yes — especially for tasks you do not run every day. Writing a strong prompt from scratch requires knowing which output sections matter, what role framing to use, and how to phrase the context to avoid ambiguity. This template encodes best-practice answers to all three questions, derived from how a senior class teacher and SENCO collaborating on a targeted support plan would actually approach student intervention plan. If you run this task daily, you will likely want to refine the template over time — but this is a strong starting point.

Does PromptEvolution store my context or outputs?

PromptEvolution does not store your prompts or context on its servers. The context you enter is used only to generate the prompt in your current session and is not logged, sold, or used to train AI models.

Try this prompt template now

Open the prompt builder, select Teacher, choose Student intervention plan, and get your optimised prompt in seconds.