Peak Ch. 4 Flashcards

1
Q

purposeful practice among people

A
  • Purposeful practice as done by different people can have very different results
  • Ex. Steve and Renee’s performance in Ericsson’s memory study
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2
Q

what is the gold standard of practice?

A

Deliberate practice is the gold standard of practice that everyone should aspire to

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3
Q

common characteristics of fields with widely accepted training methods:

A
  • There are objective or at least semi-objective ways to measure performance
  • They tend to be competitive
  • They are generally well-established
  • Teachers or coaches have developed increasingly sophisticated training techniques that make increasing one’s skill level possible
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4
Q

Ericsson et al. violin study method

A

studied the performance of great, very good, and good musicians to see what differentiated them

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5
Q

Ericsson et al. violin study findings

A
  • Most factors that the students identified as being important to their improvement were seen as labour-intensive and not very fun
  • The only major difference between the groups was the amount of time they devoted to solitary practice
  • The largest differences in practice time came in the preteen and teen years
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6
Q

Ericsson et al. violin study takeaways

A
  • Becoming an excellent violinist requires several thousand hours of practice
  • Even among gifted musicians, those who spent more time practicing were more accomplished
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7
Q

Ericsson et al. ballet dancers study

A

found a similarly strong relationship between practice time and accomplishments in ballet dancers

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8
Q

2 ways deliberate practice is different from purposeful practice

A
  • It requires a relatively well-developed field
  • It requires a teacher who can provide practice activities that have been designed to help a student improve their performance
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9
Q

principles of deliberate practice

A
  • Develops skills through established training techniques
  • Takes place outside one’s comfort zone
  • Involves well-defined, specific goals
  • Requires a person’s full and conscious actions
  • Involves feedback and the modification of efforts in response to feedback
  • Involves producing and depends on effective mental representations
  • Involves building or modifying previously acquired skills by focusing on particular aspects of those skills and working to improve them specifically
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10
Q

can you use deliberate practice in a field that is not well-established?

A

yes

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11
Q

example of deliberate practice in a field that is not well-developped

A

Feng Wang used images of objects and maps of physical locations to encode digits in his long-term memory

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12
Q

problem with subjective judgments

A

they are inherently vulnerable to all sorts of biases

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13
Q

are “experts” always experts?

A

In many fields, people who are seen as experts are not experts

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14
Q

Hodgson’s wine experts and expertise study

A

Hodgson found that wine experts will rate the same wine differently; their ratings aren’t consistent

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15
Q

Dawes psychologists and expertise study

A

found that licensed psychologists and psychiatrists were no better at performing psychotherapy than people who had received minimal treatment

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16
Q

financial experts and expertise study

A

Many studies have shown that financial experts are no better than novices or random chance of picking stocks effectively

17
Q

general practitioners and expertise study

A

General practitioners with several decades of experience perform worse on several objective measures of performance than newly-trained doctors, likely because younger doctors attended medical school more recently and remember their training better

18
Q

how can you identify an expert performer in a field?

A
  • Seeking out those who work closely with many other professionals and can help you identify the best
  • Seeking out people that professionals talk to when they need help with a particularly difficult situation
19
Q

what should you do once you’ve identified an expert in a field?

A
  • Figure out what they do that separates them from less accomplished people in the same field
  • This can be difficult because mental representations are not directly observable
  • In some cases, you can bypass this by figuring out what sets their training apart
20
Q

importance of a good coach or teacher

A
  • They can help a student develop a good foundation and gradually build on it
  • They can help a student get through challenges
  • They can give a student valuable feedback that they couldn’t get any other way
21
Q

Gladwell’s 10,000-hour rule

A

it takes 10,000 hours to become an expert at anything

22
Q

problems with the 10,000-hour rule

A
  • There is nothing special about 10,000 hours
  • 10,000 hours at age 20 for the best violinists was only an average
  • Doesn’t distinguish between deliberate practice and practice
  • Many people have interpreted it as a promise
23
Q

the core message of the 10,000-hour rule

A

in pretty much any endeavour, people have a tremendous capacity to improve their performance as long as they train the right way