Transforming Education: What Baseball Can Teach Us About Learning Whole

 

David N. Perkins, a leading thinker in education and co-director of Project Zero at Harvard, presents a compelling case for transforming how we teach by emphasizing learning as a whole process rather than fragmented instruction. Drawing from his own early experiences with baseball, Perkins uses the metaphor of “playing the whole game” to illustrate how people learn more effectively when introduced to the big picture early on, rather than being bogged down by isolated elements and facts.

Here’s the core premise. Perkins argues that traditional education suffers from two chronic illnesses:

Elementitis – teaching isolated facts and skills with little connection to the larger context.

Aboutitis – teaching about a subject without meaningful engagement in doing it.

Instead, he proposes an approach called “learning by wholes”, built on seven foundational principles:

 

Making Learning Whole

Making Learning Whole

 

The Seven Principles of Learning by Wholes

 

Play the Whole Game
Introduce learners to a junior version of the entire subject or practice early, allowing them to engage with the full context and develop intuition and understanding.

Make the Game Worth Playing
Motivation matters. Learning should be meaningful and engaging – not just a hoop to jump through for tests or future utility.

Work on the Hard Parts
While playing the whole game, isolate and practice difficult components deliberately to build mastery.

Play Out of Town
Transfer learning to new and varied contexts, preventing overreliance on familiar environments and encouraging adaptability.

Uncover the Hidden Game
Teach the underlying strategies, habits, and thinking that experts use but often leave unspoken – these are the “games within the game.”

Learn from the Team
Embrace collaborative learning. Learning is a social endeavor, and working with peers deepens understanding and fosters new insights.

Learn the Game of Learning
Cultivate metacognition – teach students how to learn, reflect, and grow in their own processes.

 

Some Fascinating Quotes From The Book

 

🌱 On the Nature of Learning:
Maybe learning most things should be more like learning how to play baseball.

This quote sums up Perkins’ central metaphor – learning should be engaging, contextual, and whole from the start.

🎯 On Motivation:
“We feel as though we are playing the school game and not the real game.” ~ Make the Game Worth Playing

A clear callout of how schooling often feels disconnected from authentic, meaningful learning.

🧩 On Traditional Education:
“It was kind of like batting practice without knowing the whole game. Why would anyone want to do that?”

This challenges the widespread focus on drilling disconnected skills without showing how they fit into a bigger picture.

🦠 On Educational Pitfalls:
“Elementitis means week after week, even year after year of focusing on elements with very little of the whole game ever played.” ~ Approaching Complexity

A memorable term Perkins coins to describe the epidemic of fragmented teaching.

🔍 On Rethinking Instruction:
“The whole point of formal education is to prepare for other times and other places, not just to get better in the classroom.” ~ Play Out of Town

A vital reminder that learning should transfer beyond the school walls.

🧠 On Real Improvement:
“Real improvement depends on deconstructing the game, singling out the hard parts for special attention… and reintegrating them into the whole game.” ~ Work on the Hard Parts

An elegant balance between practicing skills and applying them meaningfully.

🧭 On Learning How to Learn:
“Learn the game of learning.” ~ The Seventh Principle

 

Copyright myways.nextgenlearning.org

Copyright myways.nextgenlearning.org

 

Impact and Vision

 

Perkins doesn’t just critique conventional education; he offers a hopeful, practical, and research-based blueprint for educators, administrators, and policymakers. His principles are applicable across disciplines, from math to literature to leadership, and at all levels of learning.

By reimagining learning as a dynamic, integrated, and meaningful game, Perkins encourages us to empower learners not just to know – but to do, to connect, and to thrive. Perkins’ ultimate goal: that learners become reflective, self-directed, and empowered beyond any single subject.

 

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About The Article Author:

Our mission with FutureSTRONG Academy – to grow children who respect themselves, their time and their capabilities in a world where distractions are just a click or a swipe away.

I see myself as an advocate for bringing social, emotional and character development to families, schools and communities. I never want to let this idea out of my sight – Our children are not just GPAs. I’m a Writer and a Certified Master Coach in NLP and CBT. Until 2017, I was also a Big Data Scientist. In December of 2044, I hope to win the Nobel. Namasté

Write to me or call me. Tell me what support from me looks like. 

Rachana Nadella-Somayajula,
Program Director & Essential Life Skills Coach for Kids and Busy Parents

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