You have probably seen this happen. A student asks a question. The teacher explains. The student nods. The teacher explains again, in more detail. The student nods again. Then the student tries the problem and fails completely.
What went wrong? The teacher thought more explanation would help. It actually made things worse.
The Paradox of Explanation
When you understand something well, it feels simple. The connections are obvious to you. You forget that they were not always obvious. You compress years of learning into a few sentences.
The student hears your clear, simple explanation and thinks they understand. They do not. They have only understood the summary of understanding, not the understanding itself.
| What the Teacher Thinks | What the Student Experiences |
|---|---|
| “This is clear” | “This seems clear” |
| “They are nodding” | “I should nod so they stop looking at me” |
| “They understand” | “I understand the words, not the concept” |
| “One more example will help” | “Now I am confused in two different ways” |
The more the teacher explains, the more the student feels they should understand. The more they feel they should understand, the less likely they are to admit they do not.
The Expert Blind Spot
Cognitive scientists call this the “curse of knowledge.” Once you know something, you cannot remember what it was like not to know it. Your brain literally cannot go back.
This creates a blind spot. Experts consistently overestimate how much beginners understand. They use jargon without noticing. They skip steps that feel obvious. They give explanations that make perfect sense to them and almost no sense to someone who does not already know the material.
A famous study asked expert chess players to teach beginners. The experts spent most of their time on complex strategies. They barely mentioned basic piece movement. They assumed the beginners already knew the fundamentals because the fundamentals were so obvious to them.
The beginners learned almost nothing.
What Works Better Than Explanation
1. Ask questions instead of giving answers
When a student asks “how do I do this?” do not explain. Ask “what have you tried?” or “where are you getting stuck?” or “what do you think comes first?”
The student already has partial knowledge. Your job is to help them find what they already know, not to replace it with your own explanation.
2. Use worked examples, then fade them
Show a solved problem. Then show the same problem with one step missing. Then show it with two steps missing. Then give a new problem with no steps at all.
The student learns by filling gaps, not by listening to you talk.
3. Let them struggle first
Before you explain anything, give students a problem they cannot solve. Let them fail. Let them get frustrated. Then explain.
Struggle creates curiosity. Curiosity opens the brain to learning. An explanation that would have been ignored after five seconds of nodding becomes essential after ten minutes of failure.
4. Make them explain to you
After you think you have taught something, ask the student to teach it back to you. Not repeat your words — explain it in their own words. Their gaps will become immediately obvious. To you. And to them.
The IKEA Effect in Learning
Psychologists have found that people value things more when they build them themselves. IKEA furniture. Home gardens. Homemade bread. The same is true for understanding.
When a student figures something out on their own (with guidance, not explanation), they own it. When a teacher explains it perfectly, the student borrows it. Borrowed understanding disappears after the test. Owned understanding lasts for years.
What Great Teachers Do Differently
| Novice Teacher | Expert Teacher |
|---|---|
| Explains until students nod | Explains a little, then asks questions |
| Answers every question immediately | Pauses, lets students answer each other |
| Gives the solution | Gives the first step, lets students find the rest |
| Covers everything | Leaves things out on purpose |
| Measures success by “did they get it?” | Measures success by “can they do it alone?” |
The expert teacher explains less. Their students learn more.
The Exception: When Explanation Is Essential
Some things do need direct explanation. Safety procedures. Definitions of new terms. The rules of a game. Do not be ideological about this. Explain when explanation is faster and clearer than discovery.
The problem is not explanation itself. The problem is explanation without application, without questioning, without struggle, and without feedback. That kind of explanation feels productive. It is almost worthless.
A Simple Test for Your Next Explanation
Before you explain something, ask yourself three questions:
- Can the student figure this out with a small hint instead of a full explanation?
- Have I given them a chance to try and fail before I explain?
- Will I know whether they actually understood, or will I just assume because they nodded?
If you answer “no” to any of these, change your approach before you speak.
The Bottom Line
The urge to explain is generous. You know something. You want to share it. You want to save the student from struggle. That generosity is admirable. It is also counterproductive.
Learning requires struggle. Struggle requires confusion. Confusion requires space. When you explain everything, you remove the space. The student never struggles. The student never owns the understanding. The student nods, passes the test, and forgets everything two weeks later.
Explain less. Question more. Let them struggle. Then watch what they learn.




