“how eager to learn”
:
See
www.templeton.org
.
“they’re not sure what it’s all about”
:
Silvia, interview.
“How to Solve the
New York Times
Crossword Puzzle”
:
Will Shortz, “How
to Solve the
New York Times
Crossword Puzzle,”
New York Times Magazine
, April 8, 2001.
“with a slightly new turn”
:
James,
Talks to Teachers
, 108.
CHAPTER 7: PRACTICE
grittier kids at the National Spelling Bee
:
Duckworth et al., “Grit.”
“be better than the last”
:
Lacey, interview.
world expert on world experts
:
Anders Ericsson and Robert Pool,
Peak: Secrets from the New Science of Expertise
(New York:
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016). See also, K. Anders Ericsson, “The Influence of Experience and
Deliberate Practice on the
Development of Superior Expert Performance,” in
The Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance
, ed. K.
Anders Ericsson et al. (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2006). K. Anders Ericsson, Ralf Th. Krampe,
and Clemens
Tesch-Römer, “The Role of Deliberate Practice in the Acquisition of Expert Performance,”
Psychological Review
100 (1993): 363–
406.
their rate of improvement slows
:
See K. Anders Ericsson and Paul Ward, “Capturing the Naturally Occurring Superior
Performance of Experts in the Laboratory,”
Current Directions in Psychological Science
16 (2007): 346–50. See also Allen Newell
and Paul S. Rosenbloom, “Mechanisms of Skill Acquisition and the Law of Practice,” in
Cognitive Skills and Their Acquisition
, ed.
John R. Anderson (Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1981), 1–56. Grit paragons tell me, in so many words, that if you had
a magnifying glass, you’d see that learning curves are not smooth at all. Instead, there are “mini” plateaus—getting
stuck on a
problem for hours, days, weeks or even longer, and then suddenly a breakthrough. Ninety-six-year-old MacArthur Fellow and poet
Irving Feldman put it to me this way: “Learning isn’t an evenly rising slope, but a series of leaps from plateau to plateau.”
ten thousand hours of practice
:
Ericsson et al., “The Role of Deliberate Practice.”
“make a mature dancer”
:
Martha Graham, “I Am a Dancer,” on Edward R. Murrow’s
This I Believe
, CBS, circa 1953. Republished
on NPR, “An Athlete of God,” January 4, 2006,
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5065006
.
“seasoned press dispatcher”
:
Bryan Lowe William and Noble Harter, “Studies on the Telegraphic Language:
The Acquisition of a
Hierarchy of Habits,”
Psychological Review
6 (1899): 358. Also relevant is John R. Hayes, “Cognitive Processes in Creativity,” in
Handbook of Creativity
, ed. John A. Glover, Royce R. Ronning, and Cecil R. Reynolds (New York: Springer, 1989), 135–45.
is just a rough average
:
See K. Anders Ericsson, “The Danger of Delegating Education to Journalists: Why the APS Observer Needs
Peer
Review
When
Summarizing
New
Scientific
Developments”
(unpublished
manuscript,
2012),
https://psy.fsu.edu/faculty/ericsson/ericsson.hp.html
.
“
not
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