Based on what you're saying, you're saying that best results in teaching Organic is by matching patterns? i.e. a higher level of memorization?
Have you ever tried teaching from a perspective where you teach the students electron flow and why two compounds would react and what they are more likely to do based on Structure, polarity, electronegativity, etc?
I don't mean to be intrusive or offensive, I would really just like to know your take on the difference in both methods of teaching.
What you describe is exactly how I taught. In memorizing the Gettysburg Address, our brain knows the order of the letters and words because of the logical sense contained in them. For this reason, it is much easier to learn it in a language you know. While you could learn in a similar language, it would be more difficult to pick up errors if you were unfamiliar with the structure of the language.
If you printed out one of the pages I have available, you should recognize the logic of the reactions. The nucleophiles and leaving groups are written to be easily understood. The examples in the book illustrate mechanistic principles. I discuss greatly pKa's in class. Because the examples use those principles, it is beyond the scope of that book to drone on about them.
This is what happens to most students. They really don't pay much attention to mechanisms and the arrows. When I give them the worksheets in my classes, they must do so. However, they are "easy". When I say easy, I mean you can look at them and learn the mechanistic steps that go from starting materials to products. Part A contains the logic of a reaction, Part B uses that logic. When students face Part B, they must think for themselves what must happen from step to step. I don't use Part C in class as it consumes too much class time. However, I had made it a custom to choose between five and eight of the mechanisms and use five of them on each exam. In order for students to draw those mechanisms, students made many photocopies in order to write the mechanisms.
If we look at results, you would find that some students really struggle with being able to complete all five mechanisms. Furthermore, I use one or two of those same mechanisms on other problems on the exam (no mechanism required). Of the students that can write the mechanism from the worksheets, only a portion of them can take that same mechanism and apply it to a new problem.
For me, that describes the education process. When I first began teaching, I thought if I wrote the mechanisms in class, students would use them to answer questions. Practically speaking, only a limited number of students actually can. A colleague suggested that students didn't know how to student. The worksheets are exactly how I studied as an undergraduate. However, just knowing a mechanism does not guarantee application to a new problem. I don't know if that is a function of the number of repetitions I am able to give in homework problems or limitation of student abilities. (If you were in my class, you would find I primarily limit the reactions to those covered in my book.)
By using my book, teaching mechanisms, quizzes, exams, I was able to raise my class average on the ACS organic chemistry exam approximately 20 percentile points.
If there might be any instructors reading this, I am interested in finding someone to apply for an NSF grant.