The 10,000-hour 'rule' was based on Ericsson's research, but simple practice is not enough for mastery.
We need teachers and coaches to give us feedback on how we're doing to adjust our actions effectively. Technology can help us by providing short feedback loops.
There's purposeful and deliberate practice.
In purposeful practice, you gain breakthroughs by trying out different techniques you find on your own.
In deliberate practice, an expert tells you what to improve on and how to do it, and then you do that (while getting feedback).
It's possible to come to powerful techniques through purposeful practice, but it's always a gamble.
Deliberate practice is possible with a map of the domain and a recommended way to move through it. This makes success more likely.
Teachers and coaches help you get the fundamentals right.
Many who start out practicing on their own need to unlearn certain habits. Learning it well from the start is preferable.
Fundamentals are needed for expert-level performance, and teachers help to do them well.
At some point, you won't need a teacher anymore.
As you move close to the edge of your domain, you're becoming an expert yourself. At these stages, purposeful practice may become preferable to find techniques others haven't seen yet.
Even if you have a team coach, it pays to have a personal coach.
In many settings, the team coach also gets to judge your performance, making it less likely you're willing to expose your weak spots.
A personal coach can give you a safe learning environment.
Mental representations are crucial in expert performance.
A mental representation is an internal understanding of external reality. If you're an expert, you have a richer understanding of certain situations than beginners, enabling you to make better decisions.
Their mental representations enable experts to predict what result their actions will have in the world.
Like master chess players, experts can think multiple steps ahead, hypothesizing what reactions their actions will trigger and how they will act in turn.
Mental representations are important to give information meaning.
Experts are often faster because new information is meaningful for them. They can use it in a richer structure to inform their decisions.
Beginners tend to look at situations in isolation.
If you record your deliberate practice, you can enrich your mental representations through analysis.
Looking back at how you performed and what steps you took, you can create new mental representations that weren't present while you were practicing.
In deliberate practice, it's important to move outside of your comfort zone.
You often plateau with skills you're satisfied with or find fun to do. Teachers can help you break through your current level by identifying what you can improve and how to improve it.
Teachers and coaches are important for staying motivated when moving outside of your comfort zone.
Beginners often have unrealistic expectations of how fast they can progress. Teachers do know what's realistic (through their experience) and let their students know.
Willpower is not a sustainable driving force for deliberate practice.
You need to cultivate a passionate commitment to becoming better at a skill. Practicing a skill needs to be fun in itself to be sustainable, even though you will hit to unpleasant points.
Not the amount of practice but the quality of practice matters.
Coming back to the 10,000-hour 'rule': only deliberate *peak* performance leads to improvement. For this, it's necessary to practice when you feel refreshed.
Sleep is crucial to hitting peak performance.
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I create intermediate packets because they help me to:
• Provide value more often
• Become interruption-proof
• Create in any circumstance
• Stay motivated
• Help my future self
• Get more and better feedback
• Avoid heavy lifts
In week 2 of @ness_labs' phenomenal Collector to Creator course, we learned how to collect ideas, make sense of them in our specific context, and share our insights.
🧵 A thread with my key takeaways.
There are two modes of thinking:
1) Focused thinking—a conscious process of thinking around one idea.
2) Diffuse thinking—a subconscious process of thinking freely and connecting ideas.
We need both to go from note-taking (focused) to note-making (diffuse, then focused again).
For creative inspiration, we need to take time for three things:
• Ideation based on what we read, see, and experience.
• Introspection using journaling (self-reflection) and meditation.
• Idleness to allow time off from focused thinking and let diffuse thinking take over.
Since I've started to use Roam, my writing process has become a breeze.
My database is my conversation partner, and by combining my notes, I feel more like a curator. This process is influenced by @fortelabs and @soenke_ahrens.
While many people use Roam to do their research and organize their notes, few write entire articles in it.
I believe Roam's block-based architecture makes it the perfect end-to-end writing tool. Editing becomes a breeze!
My writing process has 10 (small) steps:
1. Read. 2. Link. 3. Progressive summarization. 4. Collect blocks. 5. Group and summarize. 6. Create headings. 7. Sequence blocks. 8. Draft based on summaries. 9. Leave, then reread and rearrange. 10. Proofread and ship.
That's the question we made sense of in the first week of @ness_labs' phenomenal Collector to Creator course.
Metacognition is an essential tool if you want to become a better thinker, learner, and creator.
A 🧵 thinking about thinking.
Cognition is the mental process that helps us gain knowledge and solve problems.
Metacognition means that you look at those cognitive processes so you can get better at them. It's thinking about thinking, learning about learning, knowing about knowing.
Metacognition has three parts, together forming the metacognitive loop:
• Metacognitive knowledge—understanding cognitive processes.
• Metacognitive regulation—understanding how you learn.
• Metacognitive experience—becoming aware of emotions during learning.
When most online courses are created by marketeers (not domain experts), that's a tough question.
In search of an answer, a few of us learning geeks got together recently for a workshop hosted by @bazzuto.
A 🧵 with my takeaways.
Let's start with a definition. What's a transformational (online) course?
To me, it's a program that helps you through a series of steps that ultimately cause you to see the world with different eyes and/or change your behavior in ways you held as impossible before.
Many are misguided about what works to learn languages to fluency.
Between 2007 and 2012, I lived for acquiring Spanish to a near-native level. I tried all the stuff that the commenters suggest, but most of it doesn't work.
My language learning principles are:
• Language acquisition > language learning.
• Input > output.
• Have fun.
• Use materials for natives by natives.
• Boost comprehension with a spaced repetition system.
• Don’t study grammar; only review it once you’re functional.
Aim for language acquisition over language learning.
When *learning* a language, you consciously memorize words and rules. This never leads to fluency.
When you *acquire* a language, you feed your subconscious and rewire your brain for new structures. This leads to fluency.