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Responding With Precision (Episode 20260115)
This session completes the instructional cycle introduced in the first two talks—Holding Space for Insight and Listening with Intention. After learning how to ask better questions and listen accurately to student thinking, instructors now focus on decision-making. The emphasis is on instructional judgment: deciding when to explain, when to ask another question, and when to intentionally step back and let learning unfold. Instructors explore how responding too quickly can disrupt confidence and flow, while holding back when support is needed can leave students without guidance. The goal is not perfection, but discernment—choosing the right response at the right moment based on what the learner has actually demonstrated.
- After listening carefully to a student’s response, how do you decide what to do next?
- How often do you respond because something feels uncomfortable rather than because instruction is truly needed?
- When a student is thinking out loud—but not quite “there” yet—what tells you whether to step in or stay silent?
- How do you distinguish productive struggle from genuine confusion during gameplay?
- What do you fear might happen if you wait one more turn before responding?
Talking Points
Instructional judgment is an active skill. It isn’t hesitation, and it isn’t passivity. It’s the intentional choice to know when to step in and when to hold back. Responding isn’t automatically helpful, and restraint isn’t neglect. Both are tools, and good teaching depends on using the right one in the moment.
- Judgment shows up in timing, not volume
- It’s about choosing how much support is needed, not defaulting to explanation
- Effective instruction balances action and restraint
Socratic questioning, active listening, and judgment work together—but they serve different roles. Socratic questions surface how a student is thinking. Active listening helps you interpret that thinking accurately. Judgment is what determines the impact of your response.
- Without judgment, instructors often overteach by rescuing too soon
- Or underteach by withholding clarity when it’s actually needed
- In both cases, the response doesn’t match the moment
This approach shifts the listening goal. The point isn’t to listen for right or wrong answers. It’s to listen for the learner’s state—what kind of thinking is happening right now.
Signal 1: Productive thinking
Sometimes the student is actively reasoning, testing ideas, revising language, or beginning to self-correct.
Learning is in motion.
- These moments signal forward momentum
- Stepping in too early often interrupts insight
- The instructor’s role is to protect space and allow thinking to continue
Signal 2: Vacillating
Then there are moments when thinking stops moving forward. The student circles the same idea, repeats uncertainty, or shows visible frustration.
- Silence alone doesn’t help here
- These moments often call for a clarifying explanation
- Or a reframing question that unlocks progress
Signal 3: Misalignment
At other times, the student sounds confident but is building on a shaky foundation—often a misread rule, a faulty assumption, or a flawed premise.
- Confidence doesn’t always mean correctness
- Here, a timely response prevents misunderstanding from settling
- The goal isn’t takeover—it’s realignment
Instructional judgment is an active skill. It’s the ability to notice learning shifts and respond with precision
- Teaching becomes more precise
- Students retain ownership of their thinking
- Confidence grows on both sides of the table
Good teaching isn’t about saying more. It’s about responding more precisely.
Activity
You’re going to practice using Touch Points as a noticing tool before choosing a teaching response.
We’ll review several lesson scenarios. Each scenario is a brief student response following a Socratic question—something you might realistically hear during a mah jongg lesson.
Your first task is not to decide what to do.
Your first task is to identify the touch point.
- What shift do you notice in the learner (e.g., critical thinking, seeking understanding, acknowledging facts)?
- What signal suggests attention may be needed (e.g., vacillating, misalignment; red flags)?
Decide how to respond only after you acknowledge touch points. Once you’ve identified touch points, choose the teaching response that best supports learning in that moment:
- Step Back — if thinking is productive and still unfolding
- Ask — if the thinking needs clarification, focus, or extension
- Explain — if the thinking needs realignment or support to move forward
When you make your choice, you must justify it using evidence from the learner’s response.
- What did the learner say or do that signaled one or more touch points?
- How should signals guide your response choice?
Don’t justify your decision based on your teaching style, instinct, time pressure, or preference. The decision must be grounded in the learner’s demonstrated performance.
There is no single correct answer. The goal is to build disciplined instructional judgment—learning to pause, read the signal, and choose a response that fits the learner’s state.
Journal both your chosen direction and the evidence that led you there (e.g., game phase, student response, touch points).
Before opening:
Read the scenario. Decide for yourself what touch point you notice and which teaching response you would choose before expanding the panel below.
Good instruction isn’t about how much you say—it’s about how precisely you respond.
Reflections
- Where do you tend to overuse explanation instead of questions or silence?
- How does trusting the learning process change your presence at the table?
- What would it look like to measure lesson success by student clarity rather than instructor output?
