Peak Ch. 7 Flashcards

1
Q

Laszlo and Klara Polgar chess study

A

the Polgars tested theories of expertise on their three daughters and all of them became world-renowned chess experts

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2
Q

Benjamin Bloom’s stages of expert development

A
  1. Children are introduced to their field of interest through play
  2. Becoming serious
  3. Commitment
  4. Pathbreakers
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3
Q

play stage

A
  • 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
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4
Q

becoming serious stage

A
  • 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
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5
Q

commitment stage

A
  • 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
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6
Q

pathbreakers stage

A
  • Experts who lead their field into new territory
  • They were expert performers before becoming groundbreakers
  • Involves creativity
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7
Q

achievement of younger vs. older siblings

A

Younger siblings tend to achieve more than older siblings

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8
Q

why do younger siblings tend to achieve more?

A
  • 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
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9
Q

how do parents of future mathematicians teach their children?

A

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

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10
Q

financial commitment of expert performance

A

Very few families can afford to have their children pursue expert performance

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11
Q

time commitment of expert performance

A

It can be almost a full-time job for a parent to support a child in their expert performance

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12
Q

can adults achieve expert performance?

A
  • 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
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13
Q

physical abilities and age

A
  • Physical abilities peak at age 20 and then gradually deteriorate
  • However, much of age-related deterioration happens because people decrease or stop their training
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14
Q

is it possible to be unable to develop a skill in adulthood?

A
  • 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
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15
Q

size of various brain regions in musicians study

A
  • 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
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16
Q

example of the way we acquire skills changing as we age

A

Language learning early in life takes place by adding more grey matter, but by getting rid of grey matter later in life

17
Q

adaptability of the brain

A

The brain is constantly changing and adapting as we go through the first few decades of life

18
Q

Paul Brady perfect pitch study

A
  • In 1969, Paul Brady taught himself perfect pitch by doing the right kind of practice
  • But, he didn’t get much attention because he was only one person and experimented on himself
19
Q

Mark Alan Rush perfect pitch study

A

In the mid-1980s, Mark Alan Rush provided evidence for developing perfect pitch in some adults

20
Q

creativity and deliberate practice

A

Creativity goes hand in hand with the ingredients of deliberate practice

21
Q

the Nigel effect

A

when the emergence of a new pathbuilder leads other experts to devise new techniques to match or surpass them

22
Q

what is the Nigel effect named after?

A

Named after Nigel Richards, a Scrabble expert, who came out of nowhere and surpassed the competition