After reading Malcom Gladwell’s “The 10,000 Hour Rule” I agree with some of his ideas on hard work and dedication of successful people, but his theory of success based on some ones birth year or family background I do not agree with.…
IT’S HARD WORK, NOT TALENT In this article Annie Dillard shares her view on “what talent is?”. She believes that there is no such thing as talent instead she states that’s it is hard work, love and affection that makes something successful. Dillard discusses hard work and love for something can lead you into doing extraordinary. Like when a man saves a child by lifting up a car, but that does not mean he has talent, instead it was his love toward children that gave him power to do so.…
Have you ever tried to be so perfect at something and it ended up going all wrong? I have. In the essay “So What’s So Bad About Being So-So?” by Lisa Wilson Strick (205-207) she makes the point that being perfect doesn’t always turn out the way you hope. I completely concur with her. Perfection can often be a wonderful thing, but for me, perfection caused me to have a very low confidence and so it became a vice in my life.…
Annie Dillard is an amazing author and writes about her experience of working hard and how it pays off. I 100% agree with Dillard’s beliefs about talent and if you work hard towards your goal to achieve it, then it will be much more rewarding in the end. Now a day’s people in society feel like ones’ talent just comes naturally without really having to work for them at all. This is exactly the opposite of what Annie’s perspective was on talents. Society today wants the easy way out and they don’t want to work hard to achieve their goal. If one is not born with a talent and it is not natural to them then they feel as if the talent wasn’t meant for them. In Dillard’s writings, she tries her best to relate to her readers to help them understand the message she is trying to convey.…
All in all, athletes surely are gifted, but they must apply themselves to become great. The naturally born athlete is a myth in my opinion. There is no evidence of any athlete today not having to work to become the best. There is no evidence of any gene that further enhances one’s ability to participate in any given sport. It is through training, conditioning, and practice that athletes become…
Everyone has their talents, whether it be drawing, writing, or playing a sport. No one was born with these abilities. To get to where they are now, they would have had to work. Like Doodle from The Scarlet Ibis, Waverly from Rules of the Game, or even Isaiah Bird. They all worked to be the best at what they do. Therefore abilities are not predetermined and that people do have control over them.…
Hello Monique, great contribution to this delicate topic in discussion. It must have been very difficult for you to argue for a topic that you personally oppose. From your personal point of view, I truly agree with all your argument about the negative consequences for nurses working 12 hour shifts. On the other hand the article you posted in favor of 12 hour shift did not do a good job supporting its arguments with other evidence based facts. I was also a little confused about the scenario you shared and its correlation to working extended long hours. I will be glad if you can enlighten me further on that correlation. I am currently working on an inpatient psychiatric unit and I will testify that working only 32 hours a week for 4 days even…
For example, in order to learn how to ride a bike you constantly practice being able to steady yourself while pushing the peddles in order to move forward. By the time you learn how to ride the bike you have practiced the skill so much that it is imprinted in your long term memory.…
Levitin mentions that even one is equipped with brilliant talent, he also has to practice since “ practice makes perfect,” which I think is totally right. Micheal Jordan, the best basketball player…
First of all, there is always room to improve when mastering a skill. There is always new and improved upgrades coming out to improve something. Technology, for example, has updates and new gadgets coming out, and will never…
In modern culture views on curiosity are very contradictory. On one hand curiosity is rewarded yet punished under a different light. When looking back on the past society find is very easy to praise curiosity as if they have be advocates from the start, yet when regarding present day present day encounters with curiosity potential revolutionaries are mocked every day. An example of this mockery made can be found in the discovery of the atom. The theoy of the existence of the atom was first proposed in the 5th Century B.C by the Greek philosophers Democritus and Leucippus, but because they were punished for desire to explore by society at that time, the mere possibility of the existence was not considered legitimate until the 19th century, where it was formally discovered by John Delton and Amedeo Avogadro. Now when people looks back on…
Albert Einstein is quoted for saying; “The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing. One cannot help but be in awe when he contemplates the mysteries of eternity, of life, of the marvelous structure of reality. It is enough if one tries merely to comprehend a little of this mystery every day. Never lose a holy curiosity."…
In his book The Talent Code, Daniel Coyle argues that “deep practice” accelerates skill devel-opment. Coyle states that the quickest way Individuals can achieve talent is through deep prac-tice.…
Physical endowment is visible. Shape and size, agility, and strength are all visible. So too are deliberate practice and training. You would think that the fact that training produces outcomes would dispel the myth of natural ability. After all, training demands that effort be made which leads to subsequent improvements!…
Practice means constant use of one’s intellectual and will power. Perfect means ideal, complete and excellent. Proper planning and practice promote perfect performance. Practice depends on training and it means repeating an activity. Constant practice also sharpens talents.…