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Encouraging Students to Track Their Own Progress (Episode 20260319)
Students grow most when they begin to notice their own progress. In mah jongg, improvement often appears gradually through stronger pattern recognition, clearer discard decisions, and growing confidence at the table. Encouraging students to track their development shifts their focus from winning hands to building skills, helping them recognize patterns in their thinking and become more independent learners. For instructors who want a ready-to-use solution, the American Mah Jongg Primer Vol. 2 Companion Workbook offers structured exercises, reflection prompts, and skill builders designed to help students track their improvement.
- What signs tell you a student is beginning to trust their own decision-making?
- What do students usually measure—wins, losses, or something else?
- How do you currently help students recognize their progress?
Talking Points
Tracking Progress Reduces Comparison
Many students compare themselves to faster learners at the table. Tracking personal improvement redirects attention from comparison to growth. Instead of asking, “Why are they better than me?” students begin asking, “What am I understanding better today than last week?”
Small Improvements Lead to Big Results
Mah jongg mastery comes from stacking small skills over time. Tracking progress in specific areas—like hand evaluation, discard planning, or reading exposures—helps students see how these individual skills combine to strengthen overall play.
Structured Tools Make Reflection Easier
Many students want to reflect but don’t know how to start. Providing structured worksheets or guided prompts makes self-assessment much easier. The AMJ Primer Vol. 2 Companion Workbook offers a ready-to-use framework with exercises and reflection prompts that help students observe their growth and build stronger decision-making habits.
Activity
Creating a Personal Progress Tracker
Ask instructors to design a simple reflection tool they could give their students.
Have them identify:
Skill to Track
Examples:
- Evaluating hand strength
- Planning discards
- Recognizing patterns
- Reading exposures
Reflection Prompt
Example:
“What was the strongest grouping in your dealt hand today?”
Observation Question
Example:
“What decision felt clearer today than it did last week?”
Confidence Check
Example:
“On a scale of 1–5, how confident were you in your discard decisions today?”
Encourage instructors to keep the tracker simple so students can complete it quickly after a lesson or during guided play.
Mention that instructors who want a complete solution can use the AMJ Primer Vol. 2 Companion Workbook, which already includes structured exercises and reflection prompts designed to support skill development and self-assessment.
Reflections
- What signs tell you a student is beginning to recognize their own improvement?
- Which skill would you most like your students to start tracking?
- What simple tool could you introduce in your next lesson to help students notice their progress?
Previous Episode: Concluding Lessons with Reflections (Episode 20260312)
