If you're not producing something then there's nothing for you to kind of review or ideally to have a parent or a teacher kind of comment on. So basically it's kind of you need to produce almost like an athlete basically you need to kind of do the things in order to generate feedback about how you can improve it so once we're kind of talking now about you becoming a more advanced writer and basically it may also depend a little bit on on how what kind of genre of writing you're doing. It makes a lot of sense it's injury since you run up authors now um it's something curiosity rose with me which is in that if i'm working on a book i'll
Ever hear of the 10,000 rule? The idea that it takes 10,000 hours to become world-class at anything?
Well, what if it wasn't true?
And, what if the research it was based on actually said something very different? Something that somehow got "lost in translation" when the data went mainstream.
In today's conversation, we sit down with K. Anders Ericsson, PhD, Professor of Psychology at Florida State University. He studies what it takes to be the best in the world in domains such as music, chess, medicine, and sports. And it was his research that served of the basis for the now wildly popular 10,000 hour rule that's been cited in some of the biggest books of the last 10 years..
Problem is, as you're about to discover, it's a lie. There never was a 10,000 rule. That number, along with the idea of a "rule," is based on a series of misinterpretations of his work.
In this new book, Peak: Secrets from the New Science of Expertise, and in today's conversation, Ericsson finally sets the record straight. He distills three decades of myth-shattering research into a powerful learning strategy that is fundamentally different from the way people traditionally think about acquiring new abilities.
EIn This Episode You’ll Learn:
- The difference between "traditional" practice, "purposeful" practice and "deliberate" practice.
- How Malcolm Gladwell may have misinterpreted Ericsson's research on the 10,000 hour rule.
- How Ericsson sees the importance of the role of a teacher in accelerating the path to expertise.
- What actually motivates someone to do the often grueling work for the years it takes to become great.
- How he's studied people who have learned and developed systems to memorize long strings of numbers.
Mentioned In This Episode:
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