When I teach stalling I put emphasis on the scenario exactly as you describe. A bounced landing - high nose attitude, decreasing airspeed, low power. The typical crap recovery taught during the pre solo stalling will not prepare a pilot for recovery from a bounced landing. Typically the trainee pilot is taught to recover from an entry from level flight, wings level and power off and to lower the nose, then apply power - how do you do that when 10 feet off the ground. In fact, I don’t actually have them stall until they can competently and confidently recover from just prior to the stall using the same technique you’d use in a go-around. I then progress to stall recovery, again from realistic scenarios such as crosswind and final turns.