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Science

New Research Casts Doubt On the "10,000 Hour Rule" of Expertise 192

First time accepted submitter Scroatzilla writes What makes someone rise to the top in music, games, sports, business, or science? This question is the subject of one of psychology's oldest debates. Malcolm Gladwell's '10,000 hours' rule probably isn't the answer. Recent research has demonstrated that deliberate practice, while undeniably important, is only one piece of the expertise puzzle—and not necessarily the biggest piece.
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New Research Casts Doubt On the "10,000 Hour Rule" of Expertise

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  • Agreed. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 29, 2014 @04:27PM (#48022841)
    I mastered masturbation in far less time.
  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @04:34PM (#48022885) Homepage Journal

    Most of the great works people do were based on work they actually did when they started (early doctorate or masters work, beginning music, that kind of thing).

    Then they fine tune it.

    But the mastery came early. It just got sanitized and polished later.

    • Honest, I'll get to the point but have to lay the groundwork. Quotes are all from TFA.

      In the late 1800s, Francis Galton—founder of the scientific study of intelligence and a cousin of Charles Darwin—analyzed the genealogical records of hundreds of scholars, artists, musicians, and other professionals and found that greatness tends to run in families. For example, he counted more than 20 eminent musicians in the Bach family. (Johann Sebastian was just the most famous.) Galton concluded that experts are “born.”

      Obviously this line of thinking ignores things that nepotism and cronyism easily explains. Obviously Rockefeller wealth means that his kids get the best education, have way more free time to get an education, and more money to pursue projects and education. People that don't have to clean the house, milk the cows, cook the food, etc.. have a whole lot of time on their hands to devote to intellectual advancement.

      Nearly half a century later, the behaviorist John Watson countered that experts are “made” when he famously guaranteed that he could take any infant at random and “train him to become any type of specialist [he] might select—doctor, lawyer, artist, merchant-chief and, yes, even beggar-man and thief, regardless of his talents.”

      Numerous

      • The end of the article however jumps over to the recent flawed study that goes back to eugenics (one of many out of the UK in the last 2 years). That study claims that identical twins can draw pictures more similarly than fraternal twins, therefor genes are the key factor in a persons natural ability to draw. This study is flawed as they obviously ignore every other possible impact on a person's ability to draw a picture, and simply claim "genetics".

        Please explain what are the other impacts on a person's ability to draw a picture. The primary difference between identical twins and fraternal twins is genetics. Each family may choose how much to treat its children identically versus differently, but that is a very complex item likely orthogonal to genetics.

        • by s.petry ( 762400 )
          If I take 2 sets of identical twins from an upper class neighborhood and "whole" family and compared them to 2 sets of fraternal twins in different homes (divorced parents), I would surely have biased results. Age of the twins makes a difference, abuse in the home makes a difference, etc.. etc...
          • I didn't know that the study had specifically taken kids from broken homes and compared them against kids from intact homes. If you can point me to that info, I'll happily concede that the study has too few controls to be clearly identifying results about identical versus fraternal twins. I would expect that well-cared-for kids from wealthy families would be more likely to have the opportunity to develop great drawing skills than those from poor homes where art supplies are a scarce luxury. But absent so
            • by s.petry ( 762400 )

              The study failed to mention social biases, hence my statement that the study is flawed and not false. They could easily have provided additional facts to demonstrate any potential bias. Perhaps they have this information in a different location, or unpublished. My point is that _any_ study of this type has serious biases outside of just genetics.

              I only provided easy to demonstrate potential bias since you stated that you could not see any way for a bias to exist outside of genetics.

              Boys and Girls develop

              • All the bias's you list come out in the wash if you use a reasonable study population. Unless you can show that identical twin incidence varies by income.

              • by Frobnicator ( 565869 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @09:51PM (#48024673) Journal

                meh.

                My interpretation of the article: You can't teach height, but tall untrained basketball players can be beaten by shorter experts. To be the "world's best" you need both.

                There is a difference between "expert" and "world's best".

                When it comes to expert, guided practice and training is generally enough. Even if you are short I can still teach you to be an expert at basketball. Others can still teach you how to block, how to dribble, how to pass, how to shoot, how to referee, how to coach, and how to be an expert.

                When it comes to world's best, sure, there is often a genetic component. Most people, no matter how much you train them, will never become the world's best. They can be expert and still judge and teach and work the field, being expert is not the same as being world's best. Similarly, some people, no matter how much they try to work with numbers, struggle to handle them intuitively. Given enough effort they can be taught all the way through college math and become experts, but that doesn't mean they'll become the world's expert on mathematics. Just because someone is tall doesn't make them a world-class basketball player, training is still needed. Just because someone has a pretty voice doesn't make them an automatic world's best vocalist, just because someone has a more intuitive grasp of spatial representations doesn't make them a world renown mathematician, training is still needed.

                You can become expert with guided practice, even without much natural ability. To become world's best you need both guided practice AND a genetic predisposition.

      • by rioki ( 1328185 ) on Tuesday September 30, 2014 @02:56AM (#48025551) Homepage

        So you say that everybody can pick up a skill equally? Look around you, talent is not equally distributed. Some people are good at math, some people good at writing, some are good at music. Some just pick up a skill intuitively and others struggle with it. The article hints that it is strongly based on genetics and why should it not be? You can see this very well with primary school children. Some pick up math easily and some don't, for example.

        But the point you are making is not fully off either. The different talents are distributed more or less evenly in the populace. But to convert that talent into a skill you need practice and tutoring. Your social class will be a strong indicator if you will get the tutoring, mentoring and practice required to convert it into a skill. If you can barely make rent, you will not pay your children around 100 bucks for violin lessons.

        In addition you social class will also determine the amount of tutoring you get despite of your lack talent. Not good in math, extra lessons, because we can. As a result your parent's income is the strongest indicator, if you will graduate for the university or not. Partially because you get all the additional training required to even out your difficulties, partially because it is expected of you.

        Claiming that genetics has nothing to do with it is nonsense. But there is much untapped talent, simply because of social economic circumstances. It remains that you need a lot of practice to make your talent into a skill.

    • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @05:53PM (#48023459) Journal

      Perhaps 10,000 hours is what it takes to reach your personal level of mastery. The average or the genius - once you've put in your 10,000 (or 6000 or 14,000; 10,000 is only one significant digit), you've essentially gotten as good as you will every get, down to some number far to the right of the decimal.

      • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday September 30, 2014 @01:35AM (#48025343) Journal
        No, Beethoven for example continued improving his skill until near his death. Long after he'd written pieces of great genius.

        Gladwell's observation was that people who achieve greatness work 10,000 hours.....which doesn't mean that you will reach greatness if you work 10,000 hours, but that if you don't, you certainly won't. More interestingly, he observes that working 10,000 hours is a greater indicator of success than IQ.

        I remember reading somewhere also, that it helps to have a master teacher who knows how to guide you through those 10,000 hours. Otherwise you might be swinging with the wrong golf club for half those hours.
        • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
          The article says mastery times ranges from about 700 hours to about 16,000 hours. With over a 1 magnitude difference between the high and low, it makes the average almost useless. It really depends on the individual.
    • But the mastery came early. It just got sanitized and polished later.

      Well, that's fine, I guess, but I thought we were talking about masturbation in this thread [slashdot.org].

    • I don't agree at all, and you seem to be approaching it from a solely arts-related viewpoint which is very narrow.

      Most people, the average I would say, do take somewhere in the range of 10,000 hours to "master" their craft. That's roughly five years of working at a full time job. I think of all the master project managers, developers, analysts, managers, etc., etc., I know, and I seriously doubt any of them were "masters" in their first five years. Some were naturally inclined with certain skill sets,
      • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
        Depends on what you mean by "craft". Someone may have started programming at the age of 10 and became a "master" by the time they started college, then moved on to project design, spent another few years. By the time they became a project manager, they may have already spent 15k hours programming and 10k hours designing, giving them a huge leg-up on useful skills for mastering a project manager.
    • Last thing I read was a fairly even age distribution, including both young genius and a gradual peak into old age.

      I'm not going to bother finding a citation. You go first.

  • Gladwell's is a master of relabeling the obvious. Looks like he picked the wrong research to slap his own label on this time.
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by c0d3g33k ( 102699 )

      Clearly it didn't take you 10000 hours to learn how to dash off a snarky rebuttal with no detail or supporting evidence.

      Bravo to you sir - you are a Slashdot commentor! The sky's the limit for you!

    • by radtea ( 464814 )

      Gladwell's is a master of relabeling the obvious

      Or the false.

      Personally, I glanced at a Gladwell book once and just immediately knew, in the blink of an eye as it were, that it was pablum for the toothless mind.

    • Re:Gladwell (Score:5, Insightful)

      by nine-times ( 778537 ) <nine.times@gmail.com> on Monday September 29, 2014 @05:02PM (#48023093) Homepage

      I don't agree. I think Gladwell is the master of thought-provoking oversimplified perhaps-sort-of obvious but counter-cultural idea. For example, in this case, although we have the saying, "practice makes perfect", our culture is disposed to believe that some people are simply better than others, and if you're not gifted, you just shouldn't try. Gladwell sets off on an argument that, no, if you spend enough time practicing you can be great. He oversimplifies the whole thing, but probably (I haven't read this book, actually) puts some admission that practice isn't *everything* and people do also have innate gifts. If you really researched it, you'd probably find that he has an interesting point that isn't complete enough to be "the truth".

      At least, this is the pattern I've noticed in his other books. And... I don't really mind it. It would be unwise to just read Gladwell's books and take everything he's saying on faith, but I'm not sure that's what he expects you to do. I think he might just be shooting for "thought-provoking", and in that, he's successful.

      • Re:Gladwell (Score:5, Interesting)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @05:14PM (#48023201)

        Gladwell sets off on an argument that, no, if you spend enough time practicing you can be great.

        The problem is that this is nonsense. Unless you have a LOT of innate talent, you are unlikely to be "great" at anything. When I was in 7th grade, I joined the school band, and I practiced and practiced and practiced. One day the school music teacher took me aside, and advised me to quit. She explained that I basically sucked at music, and no amount of practice was going to make much difference. She suggested that I go join the computer club instead. That was the best advice I ever had, and it changed my life.

        • Re:Gladwell (Score:4, Insightful)

          by SirMasterboy ( 872152 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @05:39PM (#48023365)

          How can you be sure she wasn't just a terrible teacher? You didn't even get a second opinion.

          • Some people cannot sing in tune. Most people do not need to be taught to do this, they can just do it straight away. If you can't sing in tune there is little point trying to be a singer.
            • by NoNonAlphaCharsHere ( 2201864 ) on Tuesday September 30, 2014 @06:15AM (#48026009)

              Some people cannot sing in tune. Most people do not need to be taught to do this, they can just do it straight away. If you can't sing in tune there is little point trying to be a singer.

              Tell that to Neil Young.

            • Apparently you have not heard of Auto-Tune.

            • Some people cannot sing in tune. Most people do not need to be taught to do this,

              Wow, that is so false you must have not spent much time around high school choirs. Most people do need to practice, a lot, to sing in tune. Some take longer than others to get it.

        • Unless you have a LOT of innate talent,

          Problem is that no one can identify innate talent beforehand. The primary manifestation of 'talent' is that someone has become very good.

          Your music teacher rejected you because you weren't improving. Instead of identifying your weakness and helping you overcome it, she judged you as incapable, not because you were incapable, but because you weren't improving.

        • If you practice anything wrong, you won't get better. If you spend 10,000 hours just doing something and not getting better, it isn't practice.

          That's not a circular argument - it's two different things.

          Someone with talent may need to put in less than 10,000 hours. Someone with little talent may need 15,000 hours. There's no magic number unless you distill out a lot of detail.

          But, if you have absolutely no sense for what you're doing, you can't practice on your own and get better. Innate talent implies t

        • Interestingly, I knew a guy whose high school conductor began screaming "stop" one day, pointed the baton at him, and said, "you will never amount to anything." His reply (in his head, he didn't want to get some teeth knocked out) was, "I'll show you, you son of a b!*ch." Fast-forward maybe 20-25 years later, and not only had he played in the Navy band designated for the president's events, but opened and purchased Jazz clubs throughout New York, which he eventually sold for so much that, by the time he was
          • There's actually a story about John Lennon failing music class and being told that he had a terrible ear for music. Something like that. It could be one of those "Einstein was bad at math" stories, but it could be true for all I know.
        • Re:Gladwell (Score:4, Insightful)

          by u38cg ( 607297 ) <calum@callingthetune.co.uk> on Tuesday September 30, 2014 @03:58AM (#48025711) Homepage
          As a music teacher, I have never - ever - found that I could not teach someone who practiced regularly and intelligently to be as good as they wanted to be. Your teacher was too damned lazy to teach you properly and as a consequence has denied you the ability to be the musician you could perfectly well have been. I can't comment on whether you ended up in a better place or not, but I can say, with absolute certainty, that your teacher was dead wrong.
        • So you played some musical instrument for a while in the 7th grade and didn't get good at it. And then some teacher said you'd never get good. Therefore, you could never be good at anything musical...?

          First, what makes you think that teacher was right? Sounds like a shitty thing to do, to tell a 7th grader that they can never be good at something, and they should just quit. What if it was math? "Hey kid, you're just not a math genius. Better quit studying."

          And did you practices for the 10,000 hours

      • And I'm not talking about the defunct currency.

        http://shameproject.com/profil... [shameproject.com]

        But he does prefer the big money over small.

      • His work can be considered thought provoking at best, and I'd attribute that to his excellent writing ability. However, he seems to have a high schoolers grasp on the subjects he writes about. None of his bold creative ideas are at all founded in fact. He seems to come in with a preconceived notion of the world and then finds anecdotes to support it.

        I was fairly disappointed after reading several of his books when I did follow up research. Every time, I came up empty handed for hard, scientific evidence
  • by Nukenbar ( 215420 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @04:38PM (#48022921)

    What a shocker..

  • rule, that article reliance on genetics isn't it.
    And a lot of it no longer jives with modern genetic science.

  • by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @04:43PM (#48022965)

    So decreasing returns isn't obvious that someone needs to study it??

    There is an exponential skill on time spent, and the return -- the skill acquired.

    If "success" only required mastery the world would be full of experts. One also needs to be in the right time, at the right place, with the right "product."

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @04:44PM (#48022973)

    If you want to succeed in anything, forget practicing and start networking.

    • This has ALWAYS been true. It's just never been quite as important, since most of what 90% of people do today requires little more than communicating.

    • Not true for skills in themselves, but nevertheless sound career advice. Don't neglect those people skills, they are important for most knowledge worker careers. And not just because the office environment happens to have a strong bias towards extroverts; these skills are actually useful for the next level job in your profession. Yes, even techies. In real life, BOFH finds himself stuck in the basement for life, if he doesn't find himself out in the street. The good news is: people and networking skills ca
    • by mcrbids ( 148650 )

      The ability to network is a skill I've spent a significant amount of time to become adept at.

    • If you want to succeed in anything, forget practicing and start networking.

      That sounds like a pretty caustic view of the world. Firstly, the title says to be an expert, not about "succeeding" in anything. And secondly -- as I read it -- you're equating success with earning money in business.

      My biggest successes don't have anything whatsoever to do with the success as you describe it:
      - I've grown to be a software craftsman
      - I have become a gentle and present dad
      - I've learned to handle money well
      - I can have a nice relationship with a pretty woman
      - I've conquered a depression

      But pl

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 29, 2014 @04:45PM (#48022983)

    Gladwell never said you needed 10,000 hours to be an expert...
    http://problogservice.com/2012/03/15/what-malcolm-gladwell-really-said-about-the-10000-hour-rule/

  • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @04:53PM (#48023041) Journal

    The article had logic approximately like this:

    Doing it for a long time doesn't always make you an expert.
    Therefore, it's genetics that make you an expert.

    All around me, I see my co-workers doing it _wrong_ for a long time. I just discovered that one guy who has been in the same job for over ten years was completely unaware of some of the most basic concepts anyone starting in the field should know. This is a database administrator and developer who didn't understand that there is a difference between the number zero, the empty string, and null. He just had never heard of null, it seems. After I explained the idea of null to him, he said our database system (DB2) doesn't support nulls. DB2 has supported nulls since it's first release in 1983. This is a guy who has spent 10-20 years as a professional DB2 developer.

    He's had lots of practice, but apparently never opened a book, including the manual. So he's been practicing it wrong for 10-20 years. Surprise, he's not an expert!

    • That's why there's a difference between 20 years experience and 1 yar experience repeated 20 times. Too bad that escapes too many (hr in particular)
      • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
        There's a reason why "talented" people don't keep repeating the same mistakes. Maybe it's because we call people who learn from mistakes, "talented". If someone can bias their mistakes to be easier to learn from and fully analyze their mistakes to learn the most from them as possible, those people will appear masterful more quickly.

        One of the things I do with my co-workers is hypothesize about where the bottleneck is in a system, create a theoretical design that I think is better, try it out, and find out
    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      All around me, I see my co-workers doing it _wrong_ for a long time. I just discovered that one guy who has been in the same job for over ten years was completely unaware of some of the most basic concepts anyone starting in the field should know.

      Years ago I was taught the saying:

      Practice doesn't make perfect.
      Perfect practice makes perfect

    • You have to refine your definition though maybe it's too broad.

      The 10,000 hours means you will be good at things you have 10,000 hours of experience with. That guy had 0 hours of experience with nulls in DB2, thus I would not expect him to be an expert at using nulls in DB2.

      But I bet he is an expert at using integers in DB2 because he has spent 10,000 hours using integers in DB2.

      To me this is akin to someone becoming as expert at playing the piano and not knowing about the foot pedals. You can certainly b

    • This is a database administrator and developer who didn't understand that there is a difference between the number zero, the empty string, and null.

      Maybe he started as a C coder and from there on it was all just computers....

    • Apparently, your guy was actually pretty smart! [thethirdmanifesto.com] He avoided the misfeature by instinct. "Practicing it wrong", my ass.
      • Doing ctrl-f search for "null" finds no mentions of them in that 580 page pdf, so I don't know what Date's current thinking is. In the last book I read by Date, he was basically suggesting that maybe we should have two types of null. Is that still what he's saying? If he's changed his tune, what is his current suggestion for unknown values?

  • ...hours of experience with HTML, just so they know I mean business?

  • Not snarky - but I've noticed that some Hollywood movies explicitly (or implicitly) state that if you want to do anything really, really well, you just have to practice, practice, practive. This sounds like a restatement of the 10,000 hour rule. Oh, and you have to really want it.

    I suspect everyone always knew this was nonsense. But is this (Gladwell) where it came from?
    • Well no, it still holds true. If you want to do something really really really well, you really do have to practice. A lot. Regardless of your genes, parents, or bank roll.

      But no matter how much they practice, the mentally retarded will not become chess masters. Even if you've got more or less average genes, some people are simply going to be better than you, quicker than you, with less practice than you put in.

      That's a hard lesson for some kids. But what can I tell you, life isn't fair.

      But hey, most of tho

  • I haven't read Gladwell's book, but I've heard more than a few different radio programs on this subject (e.g. radiolab, freakanomics, etc), that interviewed Gladwell (although not exclusively).

    One could argue that the point from Gladwell's side is that hard work and determination are more important than genetics, and I don't think this is an unfair characterization. Gladwell seems to phrase it slightly differently. That it is the love that certain people have for certain pursuits that gives them the motiv

    • I tend to think of the 10,000 hour rule and Gladwell's observations as this: Competence builds confidence which builds mastery and passion. The first couple thousand hours create the competence. You start to get the feeling that you're getting better than average about this and with confidence you start to reach out some, have some missteps, push your limits, and start to really refine and hone your skills which breeds more competence and mastery and then passion. People love things that they're really
      • I've actually turned a couple of things that I absolutely loathed and avoided as a young adult into things that I'm passionate about now, solely because I decided to spend enough effort to get competent at it, and then it ballooned from there.

        Just out of curiosity, what might an example of this be?

        I can see how becoming competent at something might lead you to like it rather than hate it. But I think after a certain point, it is quite possible to really enjoy an activity even if you are mediocre.

        If we take A: being good at something and B: being passionate about something, I don't think A causes B or that B causes A. I suspect there is a positive feedback mechanism, and in that way you may be able to cause an increase in B by forcing A.

        But let

      • Ever since John Locke laid the groundwork for the Enlightenment by proposing that we are born as tabula rasa—blank slates—the idea that we are created equal has been the central tenet of the “modern” worldview. Enshrined as it is in the Declaration of Independence as a “self-evident truth,” this idea has special significance for Americans. Indeed, it is the cornerstone of the American dream—the belief that anyone can become anything they want with enough determination.

        I think this quote from the article captures the view that I think is telling.

        We are clearly not blank slates. Does that mean we cannot become anything we want given enough determination? I think this is the wrong question. I think the right question is "Where does our determination come from?" Even if we were "blank slates", and some of us succeeded (e.g. due to extra determination, etc), that would simply mean that those with more determination are more fortunate than those with less, and surely every

  • I know the study did the work and examined the actual performance of the subjects, but most development managers know this already. How many software development managers keep seeking the '10X coder,' that person that just sees the most elegant way to solve the problem with the code. Yes, they work hard, they spend time learning, but they make fewer mistakes and their code is just more elegant.

    I keep remembering that line from 'Searching for Bobby Fischer,' "for all his natural talent, Bobby Fischer wor
  • Perhaps the flaw is identifying the "deliberate practice" as the only dependent variable. For example, I play guitar. I'm probably better than other people who have put in the same amount of practice time than I have, since I've put in 10 years on clarinet. Those ten years of music experience, give me an ability to interpret rythym, understand some music theory, read notes quickly, hear pitch, etc. than someone who is "just picking it up".

    Similarly, I know some quite good chess players who play Go as wel

    • by u38cg ( 607297 )
      Yes. There's a book - something like "The Child As Musician" that goes into some detail about childhood musical skill acquisition. The lesson I took from that for my teaching is that different kids arrive for their first music lesson with wildly varying levels of musical skill, despite never having had a formal lesson in their lives.
  • No rule (Score:5, Interesting)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @05:28PM (#48023301) Journal

    I hate hearing described this supposed "10,000 hour Malcom Gladwell rule". There's no such thing. Gladwell has long been trying to explain that the 10,000 hour rule was not a recipe for success, only a requirement for mastery. The fact is that mastery is no guarantee of success.

    And lately, Gladwell has been giving a much greater emphasis to the notion of love for what you're doing being a more direct quality of those who are successful. And it's more than really just "love". There's an element of intent and desire and yes, love. What made Michael Jordan shoot free throws for hours and hours after it had gotten dark when he was 12 years old? And continue to do so when he was 27 and already a world champion? Why did Charlie Parker disappear for three years and practice 13 hours every day after he had been so badly embarrassed on the bandstand for not knowing how to play in more than one key? Part of it was his desire to "show those guys" after his earlier failure. And part of Michael Jordan's incentive was his famous (or infamous) almost pathological competitiveness. But those things are never enough. Because spite and desire can only take you so far, and they both have negative effects. They'll eventually eat you up (as may have been the case in Bird's example, because clearly his drug use and self-destructiveness would seem to indicate that something was eating him up). But to put the time in requires love. Doing something because it's something you can't imagine not doing. Because that's how you see yourself - that's who you are. The possible financial rewards are not nearly certain enough for that to be the sole motivation. I will bet that Michael saw himself as a basketball player and Bird as a jazz man well before they were on their way to success.

    There's no guarantee for success, but there are recipes and the ingredients are often kind of specific. The good news, is that if you really love doing something, it improves the chances the recipe will be successful. Kind of like garlic and butter. There's no guarantee that a dish will be delicious, but if you start with garlic and butter, the odds improve, you know?

  • by bjdevil66 ( 583941 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @05:35PM (#48023345)

    The world is full of people that are gifted in some way but don't work hard (it came too easily or they burn out). They ultimately don't make near the impact that good but not necessarily gifted people that work their butts off.

    It's a truly rare bird when someone is truly gifted, they personally recognize it early, chase it, and has the drive to perfect their skill until it shines above the rest. These are the oddballs in society, secretly feared/hated and sometimes taken advantage of by their more socially adjusted but lesser peers, that move their world of influence forward. Socrates. Archimedes. (William) Tyndale. Galileo. Newton. Mozart. Tesla. Einstein. (George) Patton. Bobby Fischer. Michael Jordan. Imagine if any of these people decided to sluff off... How different would our world be?

  • The way the rule is stated and repeated in modern culture is a vast oversimplification, and so a critique is fine. As some have noted, the argument was also about the "ability and drive" to put in the 10,000 hours. Certainly, individual factors do play a role. The only reason this is controversial is when people try to apply it to certain populations, where there is no evidence for that at all (in fact, plenty to the contrary). The article itself notes this.

    But, it does raise a question: Are there skills re

  • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @05:47PM (#48023425) Journal

    10,000 hours isn't some magical perfect answer to every one of life's skill and talent questions. It's a round number - notice that there's only a single significant digit. And "mastery" really changed depending on your subject. But more importantly, you're parent rolled 3d6 for all 6 of your attributes and, god damnit, if you got a 5 for intelligence you are never going to be a fucking magic user no matter how many hours you study. Hell, you could have rolled an 18, but you're still going to need to get some experience if you really want to cast a delayed blast fireball.

    10,000 hours is about 5 years of working at something - diligently - full time. Your profession, your reason for being, your everything. Yes, somebody is going to be better than you and beat you to it with less time. There are 7 billion people in the world, the chances of finding somebody with more innate talent is pretty damned high. And, hey - no matter how long you practice, the chances of you becoming a master in something for which you have no aptitude or - worse - missing some serious prerequisites is going to be very low. But take the average person with average aptitude and give him or her 10,000 hours to practice or train with the goal of becoming proficient in a chosen field, and they're going to learn enough to be considered a "master". Not the best in the world, probably not the second or third best, or whatever you want to call the absolute cream, but you will have mastered it.

    And, lets face it, even after 10,000 hours you're still not going to be able to cast a Wish spell and get what you want, but you can sure as hell go on a quest with me 'cause after 10,000 hours you're going to be one bad ass magic user. Or dragon poo. (which I understand goes for a fair sum to the right NPC)

     

  • by Charliemopps ( 1157495 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @06:10PM (#48023561)

    WTF?

    The rule isn't "practice 10,000hrs and you'll be successful"
    It's: "If you are successful, you probably practiced 10,000 hours"

    Meaning, if you have the correct body shape, mental acuity, financial situation, then 10,000hrs of practice could give you the opportunity to be an outlier. Midgets can't be in the NBA just because they practiced a lot. I'm not going to win spelling bees just because I've spent 10k hours posting to slashdot. etc...

  • I'm not exactly sure how many hours it took or when it clicked, but after programming video games for 22 years, I finally can code anything I want very rapidly. While I can't grant you all the insight into how I do software architecture, I found one really cool method. If you design your memory structure(data structures) first, all your methods should write themselves. When I started coding games, it was the hardest thing I ever did mentally, way harder than even physics when they do rocket science. But
  • I think it really requires all of the above (Passion, Education, Practice) to be a real expert. Those that really love a particular subject tend to do the other two automatically. Whether it's fixing cars, botany, math, or computer programming. I look for people with passion to work with. If they do what they do just because it's a job, I don't really want to work with drones.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • It's been quite some time since I read that book but as I remember it 10,000 hours was never presented as some iron clad rule defining how long it took to achieve mastery but rather it was a convenient notational shorthand for "lots and lots of practice is required". To nit-pick over the specific number of hours is to completely miss the point. The point was that lots of practice is required, and those that don't put in that practice (because of lack of passion or lack of opportunity) will never achieve m
  • by bakes ( 87194 ) on Monday September 29, 2014 @10:19PM (#48024775) Journal

    You can get awesome at anything in much less than 10,000 hrs if you have a montage.

  • by Spy Handler ( 822350 ) on Tuesday September 30, 2014 @03:16AM (#48025597) Homepage Journal

    It seemed obvious to me, even when I was young, that lots of practice is important in mastering a skill.

    But it also seemed obvious that having innate talent is just as, or more important than practice. Guy with 90 IQ is never gonna be a chess grandmaster or a nuclear physicist, even after 10,000 hours or 100,000 hours.

    Or maybe I'm not a genius and these are pretty damn obvious points that should occur to anyone looking without blinders on (e.g. religious liberal belief that every child is a precious flower equally capable of anything as every other child)

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