Advertisement

Tulis ulang artikel berikut ke dalam bahasa Indonesia yang rapi, mudah dipahami, gaya formal pendidikan, minimal 300 kata:

Designing for Depth: When High Achievement Isn’t the Whole Story 

contributed by Laura Mukerji, InterestEd Educational Solutions 

In most classrooms, we rely on visible indicators like grades, accuracy, and finished work to tell us whether learning is happening.

While those measures are useful, they do not always show how students are actually thinking. 

Many students become very good at ‘doing school.’ They learn how to meet expectations, follow directions, and produce the right answers, often without needing to extend their thinking in meaningful ways. As this pattern develops, efficiency can begin to replace curiosity, and correctness can take the place of reasoning. 

Research on motivation suggests that students need both autonomy and meaningful challenge to stay engaged. When those elements are missing, motivation can shift toward completion rather than true investment in learning. In those environments, learning becomes something to get through rather than something to engage with. 

Research on motivation suggests that students need both autonomy and meaningful challenge to stay engaged.

When Performance Replaces Thinking 

In most classrooms, we rely on visible indicators like grades, accuracy, and finished work to tell us whether learning is happening. While those measures are useful, they do not always show how students are actually thinking. 

Many students become very good at learning how to meet expectations, follow directions, and produce the right answers, often without needing to extend their thinking in meaningful ways. As this pattern develops, efficiency can begin to replace curiosity, and correctness can take the place of reasoning. 

Research on motivation, particularly the work of Edward Deci and Richard Ryan, helps explain why this matters. When students are not given opportunities for autonomy or meaningful challenge, motivation can shift toward completion rather than engagement. In these…



Sumber: Baca selengkapnya

Tulis ulang artikel berikut ke dalam bahasa Indonesia yang rapi, mudah dipahami, gaya formal pendidikan, minimal 300 kata: 
	
contributed by Mike Brown, education researcher at preppool.



Every educator has seen it.



A thoughtful, engaged student studies diligently, participates in class discussions, completes assignments on time—and then underperforms on the first major assessment.



The disappointment is visible. Sometimes the teacher feels it just as strongly as the student.



The instinctive explanations are familiar: anxiety, distraction, poor time management, lack of effort. But if this pattern repeats across classrooms and grade levels, it may point to something more structural.



What if first-time underperformance is less about student shortcomings and more about how we design learning?



If we look closely, many learning environments unintentionally reward familiarity over retrieval, coverage over coherence, and comfort over cognitive strain. Students leave review sessions feeling confident—only to discover that confidence was built on recognition, not recall.



That distinction matters more than we often admit.



The Gap Between Knowing and Being Able to Retrieve



In most classrooms, preparation looks something like this:



Students reread notes.



They highlight key passages.



They review slides.



They skim summaries.



These activities feel productive. There is visible effort. There is time invested. There is even a sense of clarity while reviewing.



But recognition is not retrieval.



When information is in front of us, it feels accessible. When it isn’t, the experience changes. Exams and performance tasks require students to produce knowledge independently—sometimes under time constraints, sometimes in unfamiliar formats.



The problem is not that students don’t “know” the material. The problem is that they have not practiced retrieving it often enough.



In research work examining exam-readiness behaviors—including analysis conducted by the team at PrepPool studying assessment performance trends—one pattern appears...   Sumber: Baca selengkapnya

Ringkas artikel ini ke dalam bahasa Indonesia yang jelas dan formal maksimal 120-150 kata:

Designing for Depth: When High Achievement Isn’t the Whole Story 

contributed by Laura Mukerji, InterestEd Educational Solutions 

In most classrooms, we rely on visible indicators like grades, accuracy, and finished work to tell us whether learning is happening.

While those measures are useful, they do not always show how students are actually thinking. 

Many students become very good at ‘doing school.’ They learn how to meet expectations, follow directions, and produce the right answers, often without needing to extend their thinking in meaningful ways. As this pattern develops, efficiency can begin to replace curiosity, and correctness can take the place of reasoning. 

Research on motivation suggests that students need both autonomy and meaningful challenge to stay engaged. When those elements are missing, motivation can shift toward completion rather than true investment in learning. In those environments, learning becomes something to get through rather than something to engage with. 

Research on motivation suggests that students need both autonomy and meaningful challenge to stay engaged.

When Performance Replaces Thinking 

In most classrooms, we rely on visible indicators like grades, accuracy, and finished work to tell us whether learning is happening. While those measures are useful, they do not always show how students are actually thinking. 

Many students become very good at learning how to meet expectations, follow directions, and produce the right answers, often without needing to extend their thinking in meaningful ways. As this pattern develops, efficiency can begin to replace curiosity, and correctness can take the place of reasoning. 

Research on motivation, particularly the work of Edward Deci and Richard Ryan, helps explain why this matters. When students are not given opportunities for autonomy or meaningful challenge, motivation can shift toward completion rather than engagement. In these…