Thursday, April 21, 2016 by Michelle Russell | PRACTICE TIPS
As we begin more lessons, it is most important to remember that progress is a process. This means that it may take a while for progress to show depending on what practice sessions are like at home. In the famously quoted work, Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell, it takes at least 10,000 hours to master any skill. According to the cited psychologists in Gladwell's work, data provided by a Psychological Review (Ericsson; Krampe; & Tesch-Romer 1993) produced the following conclusion:
"The theoretical framework presented in this article explains expert performance as the end result of individuals' prolonged efforts to improve performance while negotiating motivational and external constraints. In most domains of expertise, individuals begin in their childhood a regimen of effortful activities (deliberate practice) designed to optimize improvement. Individual differences, even among elite performers, are closely related to assessed amounts of deliberate practice. Many characteristics once believed to reflect innate talent are actually the result of intense practice extended for a minimum of 10 years. Analysis of expert performance provides unique evidence on the potential and limits of extreme environmental adaptation and learning" (1993).
This logic dictates that the more hours you spend practicing, the more effective your progress becomes.
Let's be realistic about this for a second. Getting into the school year, more of the following stressors start to demand attention investment:
In some cases, depending on how one assigns priority to each stressor, more time invested may not realistically produce the result that you want. According to a recent study (Hambrick; Oswald; Altmann; Meinz; Gobet; &Campitelli 2014), psychologists discovered that "individual differences in accumulated amount of deliberate practice accounted for about one-third of the reliable variance in performance in chess and music, leaving the majority of the reliable variance unexplained and potentially explainable by other factors" (2014). This refutes the original 1993 study by implying subjectivity to the effectiveness of intense practice. It implies that other factors such as cognitive ability and personality may also have a role in the overall quality of the learning process. In response, Ericsson (2014) defended his data stating that the sample conducted by the recent study was too largely composed of people in the general population who demonstrated beginner level skills. He suggests that if the methodology of the experiment included only an examination of those who had displayed expert level performance, the conclusion remains the same: to obtain expert level skills, there must be extensive deliberate practice.
In my experience, both conclusions and approaches are true. In order for there to be progress, there must be a process that takes into account the differences between each individual's skill level and learning style. However, the key to moving forward will always lie in how the student practices mindfulness of his or her skills through deliberate practice.
So where do we start? How do we know exactly how long and how intensely to practice? What do we need to do when we practice?