Why Educational Videos Often Fail (And How to Make Them Better)
“Students rarely stop watching because a subject is difficult. They stop watching because the explanation is unclear.”
That may sound slightly harsh… but after producing educational videos for years, I’m convinced it’s true.
Students will happily wrestle with:
- difficult maths
- abstract physics
- complicated chemistry
- dense biology concepts
If they feel they are making progress.
What they won’t tolerate for long is confusion caused by poor teaching design.
And that’s an important distinction.
A difficult topic is not the problem.
A badly presented topic is.
The Explosion of Educational Video
We live in a remarkable age.
A student struggling with:
- differentiation
- moles
- electric fields
- attachment theory
Can pull out a phone and instantly access hundreds of videos.
That’s extraordinary.
But here’s the awkward truth.
A lot of those videos are not very good.
Some are excellent.
Some are… painfully difficult to sit through.
And it usually has nothing to do with the subject knowledge of the presenter.
It’s the delivery.
The Most Common Reasons Educational Videos Fail
1. They Take Too Long to Get to the Point
We’ve all seen them.
You click on a video called:
“Understanding Buffers in 10 Minutes”
And after four minutes you’ve learned:
- the presenter’s life story
- what coffee they’re drinking
- that they nearly didn’t make the video
But not buffers.
Students come with a problem to solve.
They need momentum.
A short introduction is fine.
A rambling preamble is fatal.
2. The Audio Is Terrible
Oddly enough, viewers will tolerate mediocre video.
They will not tolerate dreadful sound.
Problems include:
- echo
- hiss
- clipping
- low volume
- background noise
- inconsistent levels
If students are straining to hear…
They stop concentrating on the content.
And once concentration breaks, learning collapses.
Good audio is not optional.
It’s essential.
3. The Writing Is Tiny
This one drives me mad.
A beautifully explained solution… written in handwriting visible only from the International Space Station.
If a student is watching on:
- a phone
- a tablet
- a laptop
Then small writing is effectively invisible.
The result?
Frustration.
If they cannot read the explanation, the explanation might as well not exist.
4. No Clear Structure
A surprising number of educational videos feel improvised.
The presenter starts somewhere… wanders… remembers another point… circles back… then stops.
The student is left wondering:
“What exactly was I meant to learn?”
A good teaching video needs structure:
- what are we doing?
- why does it matter?
- what do you need to know?
- worked example
- summary
Without structure, information becomes noise.
5. Too Much Talking, Not Enough Showing
This is particularly common in science.
The presenter talks about an experiment.
Instead of showing it.
Or describes:
- motion
- waves
- refraction
- electrolysis
Without visual evidence.
But science is visual.
Students need to see what’s happening.
Talking alone is often not enough.
How I Approach Educational Video Differently
Over time, I’ve built my own approach around one simple principle:
If a student can clearly see and hear the explanation, understanding improves dramatically.
That sounds obvious.
But surprisingly few videos are designed around that idea.
Multi-Camera Teaching Changes Everything
Instead of one static shot, I often use multiple camera angles.
That allows:
- close-ups of experiments
- overhead views of written work
- face-to-camera explanation
- data displays
- apparatus detail
Students don’t have to imagine what is happening.
They can see it.
Clearly.
That transforms understanding.
Real Experiments Beat Talking About Experiments
This matters particularly in science teaching.
There’s a huge difference between:
“Let me describe electrolysis…”
and
“Let me show you electrolysis happening now.”
When students see:
- bubbles forming
- colour changes
- sensors responding
- graphs building live
The concept becomes real.
Not theoretical.
That’s why having both a studio and a working lab matters.
Clear Audio Is a Teaching Tool
I use proper microphones for a reason.
Not because it sounds fancy.
Because clear sound reduces effort.
Students should be concentrating on:
the explanation
Not decoding muffled speech.
Even simple improvements make a huge difference:
- close microphones
- noise reduction
- level balancing
- removing echo
Good sound makes teaching feel effortless.
Bad sound makes learning exhausting.
Step-by-Step Pacing Matters
One of the biggest mistakes in educational videos is assuming students think as fast as the presenter.
They don’t.
Good teaching pacing means:
- one idea at a time
- pause between steps
- explain why, not just what
- recap key points
This is especially important in:
- maths
- physics calculations
- chemistry problem solving
Students need time to process.
Fast is not efficient if nobody understands.
Visual Clarity Beats Fancy Graphics
Expensive animations are nice.
But they are not essential.
What matters more:
- readable writing
- uncluttered screens
- sensible zooming
- visual emphasis
A simple clear diagram beats a flashy confusing one every time.
Why Students Stop Watching
It is rarely because the topic is inherently hard.
Usually it is because:
- they feel lost
- they cannot follow
- they miss a key step
- the explanation becomes effortful
That’s a design problem.
Not an intelligence problem.
The Real Goal
Educational video should not simply:
deliver information
It should:
build understanding
That means asking:
- what can the student see?
- what can they hear?
- what might confuse them?
- where might they stop watching?
If you solve those problems…
Retention improves.
Engagement improves.
Learning improves.
The Bigger Lesson
Interestingly, this applies far beyond education.
Whether you’re making:
- teaching videos
- sailing films
- tutorials
- social media clips
The principles are the same:
Clarity beats complexity.
Communication beats cleverness.
And viewers stay when they understand.
Final Thought
Students rarely stop watching because a subject is difficult.
They stop watching because the explanation is unclear.
And that’s actually encouraging.
Because clarity can be designed.
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