Peak Ch. 7 Flashcards
Laszlo and Klara Polgar chess study
the Polgars tested theories of expertise on their three daughters and all of them became world-renowned chess experts
Benjamin Bloom’s stages of expert development
- Children are introduced to their field of interest through play
- Becoming serious
- Commitment
- Pathbreakers
play stage
- Parents play a crucial role in development at this stage
- Parents play with their children and gradually reveal the real purpose of the toy
- Parents motivate their children through praise
- Parents encourage their children to develop similar interests to their own, simply by interacting with kids
- Children usually come up with activities that are part play part training
- Children tend to be motivated by their older siblings’ accomplishments in a given field and try to emulate them
becoming serious stage
- Children take lessons from a coach
- The coach doesn’t have to be the best, but they should be good at working with children
- Practice becomes about work
- Parents play an important role in encouraging practice
commitment stage
- Occurs in the early to mid-teens
- Students will seek out the best teachers, even if it means moving across the country
- The student does as much as humanly possible to improve
- Motivation lies solely in the student, though the family may play an important support role
pathbreakers stage
- Experts who lead their field into new territory
- They were expert performers before becoming groundbreakers
- Involves creativity
achievement of younger vs. older siblings
Younger siblings tend to achieve more than older siblings
why do younger siblings tend to achieve more?
- Parents learn from their experience with the older siblings and do better with the younger ones
- A younger sibling may become interested in an activity earlier on
- The older sibling can teach the younger one
- Competition among siblings benefits the younger one
how do parents of future mathematicians teach their children?
Parents of future mathematicians don’t teach their children math at a young age; they teach them the importance of education and expose them to intellectually stimulating activities
financial commitment of expert performance
Very few families can afford to have their children pursue expert performance
time commitment of expert performance
It can be almost a full-time job for a parent to support a child in their expert performance
can adults achieve expert performance?
- We can acquire new skills as we age but the specific way we acquire them changes as we get older
- There are relatively few limitations on what it is possible to achieve for people who begin training as adults
physical abilities and age
- Physical abilities peak at age 20 and then gradually deteriorate
- However, much of age-related deterioration happens because people decrease or stop their training
is it possible to be unable to develop a skill in adulthood?
- Yes, some skills simply can’t be developed to expert levels if one doesn’t start working on them in childhood
- Ex. the classic turnout in ballet dancers must be developed before the knee and hip joints calcify to reach expert performance
size of various brain regions in musicians study
- Many regions of the brain are larger in musicians than nonmusicians, but only if they started training before a certain age
- These regions tend to be related to muscle control