Teaching Students to Work Harder and Enjoy It: Practice Makes Permanent
points out a single, fundamental, and easily-corrected flaw that has
held back American education for nearly a century--the design of
instruction to achieve familiarization instead of mastery. This book
explains the psychological dynamics and methods involved in mastery, and
how to apply them easily in K-12 learning. A basic insight is that once
students have a correct answer to any question, a straight road to its
mastery is entirely comprised of practice. Practice continues to "make
perfect" in all skill areas including the accumulation of a body of
knowledge. Outlined here are the forms of it that enable students to
master academic learning perfectly and permanently, as well as become
competent with social/emotional skills and alter their behavior. A
combination of methods especially valuable for students falling behind
can turn classrooms around quickly.