Skip to main content

Home/ Student QOL/ Group items tagged deliberate_practice

Rss Feed Group items tagged

John Burk

The Focused Sprint Approach: Rapid Skill Acquisition for Breaking Through Plateaus | Ex... - 0 views

  • First, you have to admit that whatever you’re currently doing isn’t working.
  • Next, you need shake up your learning methods.
  • Now, here’s where the sprint part comes in. Commit to putting in at least 2x to 3x the effort you’ve been putting in for a focused period of time.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • By the end of the two weeks you will have busted through your plateau and rekindled your love of the sport
  • In either case, when your target skills don’t increase in any appreciable way for a significant period of time, you run the risk of never reaching your desired level of expertise. Or worse, you might give up altogether.
John Burk

Deliberate Practice: What It Is and Why You Need It | Expert Enough - 0 views

  •  
    excellent summary of deliberate practice. 
John Burk

Guitar Zero: A Neuroscientist Debunks the Myth of "Music Instinct" | Brain Pickings - 0 views

  • If critical periods aren’t quite so firm as people once believed, a world of possibility emerges for the many adults who harbor secret dreams — whether to learn a language, to become a pastry chef, or to pilot a small plane. And quests like these, no matter how quixotic they may seem, and whether they succeed in the end or not, could bring unanticipated benefits, not just for their ultimate goals but of the journey itself. Exercising our brains helps maintain them, by preserving plasticity (the capacity of the nervous system to learn new thing), warding off degeneration, and literally keeping the blood flowing. Beyond the potential benefits for our brains, there are benefits for our emotional well-being, too. There may be no better way to achieve lasting happiness — as opposed to mere fleeting pleasure — than pursuing a goal that helps us broaden our horizons.”
John Burk

Annie Murphy Paul: The Myth of 'Practice Makes Perfect' | TIME Ideas | TIME.com - 0 views

  • Studies show that practice aimed at remedying weaknesses is a better predictor of expertise than raw number of hours; playing for fun and repeating what you already know is not necessarily the same as efficiently reaching a new level.
  • “Deliberate practice,” Ericsson declares sternly, “requires effort and is not inherently enjoyable.”
  • “the most notable differences between the practice sessions of the top-ranked pianists and the remaining participants,” Duke and his coauthors wrote, “are related to their handling of errors.”
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page