That assumes that all CFIs know what they're doing. I have found that to be inaccurate. Too many have their students holding approach speed right down to two feet off the runway, then flaring and floating for thousands of feet in ground effect until the thing finally runs out of speed. Or they let it land really flat, risking porpoising or wheelbarrowing and wrecking the nosegear stuff and burning out brakes and tires. There is no hope of ever meeting landing distances published in the POH while doing that.
There is such a thing as round-out, a reducing of power and raising the nose while still above ground effect so as to arrive in ground effect at a speed that won't generate float. It's simply not being taught by many CFIs. They seem afraid of stalling on final or something, and instead they introduce the risks I outlined above. They need to go up high and do power-off stalls, flaps extended, and see just what the ASI shows when the stall break comes. Of course, they must be unafraid of stalls. But they'd learn that they are carrying way too much speed into the landing. And too much speed is the biggest handicap to learning to land.