Studio 7/8 Program Overview 


Today, many students often say, “I knew it, I just made a careless mistake.” However, in many cases, this is not a true careless mistake. It is a result of a deeper habit—assuming understanding simply because something looks familiar at a glance. In today’s learning environment, students often consume information the same way they scroll through short-form videos. They quickly scan content visually and move on without verifying whether they truly understand it. Over time, this weakens their internal “self-check system” that distinguishes between what they actually know and what they only recognize. If this distortion is not corrected early, academic performance tends to plateau, and students begin to accept repeated mistakes as something normal, even in high-stakes exams.


One of the simplest ways to identify this issue is to ask a child: “Can you explain one thing from today’s class that you found interesting or important, and why it mattered to you?” In most cases, students struggle to answer clearly. Many respond vaguely, or simply say, “There was something like that.” That moment often reveals the gap between recognition and true understanding. When asked to write it down, the gap becomes even more obvious. Many students are unable to organize their thoughts or explain them in a way that another person can understand. This is not due to a lack of ability, but rather because they have not been given enough opportunities to practice structuring and verifying their own thinking.


Real learning does not come from simply seeing or hearing information. It begins when students actively organize their thoughts and express them in language. However, the current public education system often does not provide enough time or structure for students to fully go through this process. As a result, many students complete their schooling without developing a stable mechanism for checking their own understanding.


To address this gap, students need repeated opportunities to express their thoughts verbally and in writing. This is not simply about solving problems, but about explaining “why they think the way they do.” Through this process, students gradually develop the ability to distinguish between what they truly understand and what they do not. However, it is also realistic that parents cannot consistently support this process on a daily basis. After long working hours, it is often difficult to fully listen to a child’s explanations and provide meaningful feedback on a regular basis.


Because we understand these challenges and limitations, our program exists. We help students express their thinking in language, examine their own understanding, and structure their thought process in a more organized way. This is not simply about solving more problems, but about developing the ability to clearly recognize what they understand and what they do not.


If you are interested in this process or would like more information about the program, please contact Director Mi-young Lee, at 703.298.3558.