I have had a guitar for many years. Not the same one but the same problem: I’m not a very skilled guitar player. In addition to short fingers, I don’t practice and never did. Consequently, not very skilled.
There are a few genetic advantages we can be born with but most skills are acquired by consistent, persistent practice. There is no general skill for balance or coordination. But there is a lot of variation in the amount of time people devote to practicing a specific skill.
Terms
- AAA BBB CCC
- ABC ABC ABC
- ACB ABC BAC
- artificial ventilation
- autonomous stage
- block practice
- certainty
- classification dimensions
- closed environments
- complex skills
- continuous movements
- declarative stage
- delayed retrieval
- differentiation
- discrete movements
- discrete skills
- discriminative-contrast hypothesis
- distributed practice
- economy of motion
- environmental factors
- environments
- experiential learning
- experts
- explicit knowledge
- external-paced
- fine motor skills
- flow
- fluency
- fluid movements
- general ability
- grace
- gross motor skills
- hecklers
- hobbies
- implicit knowledge
- improvisations
- Increased effectiveness
- interleaved practice
- Johns Hopkins
- Kahneman, Daniel
- maximum certainty
- maximum fluency
- minimum energy
- minimum time
- mixed skills
- motor stage
- movements
- muscles
- open environments
- pacing
- performance characteristics
- practice
- practice exercises
- practiced behavior
- productive failure
- proficiency
- randomized order
- retrieval-practice hypothesis
- self-pacing skills
- serial skills
- series
- simple skills
- simplicity
- small gains
- speeded tests
- stages of learning skills
- start with a guide
- talk your way through it
- target behaviors
- target contexts
- target skills
- targets
- task specific
- Thinking Fast and Slow
- timed events
- tips
- track your progress
- uniqueness
- variation
- when matters
- working memory
Quiz
The first stage of skill development is:
- a. interleaved
- b. declarative
- c. expressive
- d. implicit
2. Component actions needed to perform target skills are:
- a. maximally fluent
- b. target behaviors
- c. predictable
- d. discrete
3. Playing jazz is an:
- a. elaborated environment
- b. inverted environment
- c. aligned environment
- d. open environment
4. A signer who is neither flat or sharp is demonstrating:
- a. maximum certainly
- b. maximum fluency
- c. minimum energy
- d. minimum time
5. Skills are:
- a. not a general ability
- b. open or closed
- c. practiced
- d. all of the above
1. The first stage of skill development is:
- a. interleaved
- b. declarative
- c. expressive
- d. implicit
2. Component actions needed to perform target skills are:
- a. maximally fluent
- b. target behaviors
- c. predictable
- d. discrete
3. Playing jazz is an:
- a. elaborated environment
- b. inverted environment
- c. aligned environment
- d. open environment
4. A signer who is neither flat or sharp is demonstrating:
- a. maximum certainly
- b. maximum fluency
- c. minimum energy
- d. minimum time
5. Skills are:
- a. not a general ability
- b. open or closed
- c. practiced
- d. all of the above
Here are 5 things we’ll cover:
- What are skills
- Skill acquisition stages
- Practice
- Fast & Slow
- Tips
are my notes on this topic:
1. What are skills
- Not a general ability
- Test-taking skill
- Performance characteristics
- maximum certainty
- maximum fluency
- minimum energy
- minimum time
- Classification Dimensions (six)
- environment
- muscles
- target
- movement
- simplicity
- pacing
- Behavior classifications
- Target behaviors & contexts
- Discrete, Continuous, Serial, & Mixed
2. Skill acquisition stages
- declarative
- motor
- autonomous
3. Practice
- Rehearsal
- substantial (orchestra)
- some rehearsal (wedding)
- none (Noh therater)
- mental rehearsal
- expanded rehearsal strategy
- Blocked Practice (normal)
- Review basics
- Complete practice exercises
- Acceptable level of proficiency, move on
- AAA
- BBB
- CCC
- Interleaved Practice
- Also called: varied practice or mixed practice
- Work on multiple skills in parallel
- Series: ABC ABC ABC
- Randomized: ACB ABC BAC
- NOTE: can’t work on same type of problem back to back
- Two groups
- Blockers (block practice)
- Given one tutorial
- 4 related practice problems
- Move on from spheres to cones, etc.
- Mixers (interleaved practice)
- given all four tutorials
- completed 16 practice problems
- mixed
- 1 of each in every cluster of 4
- Both groups
- Two practice sessions
- Test one week later
- Results
- Blockers did better on practice sessions
- ~29% better
- Mixers did better on tests
- 43% better
- Theories
- Retrieval-practice hypothesis
- First problem retrieves needed info
- Remainder of problems; only use working memory
- Practicing retrieval makes a path from LTM to working memory
- Discriminative-Contrast Hypothesis
- Practice one skill over and over; doesn’t differentiate between them
- Retrieval-practice hypothesis
- Johns Hopkins
- manipulate computer cursor
- device you squeeze
- Three groups
- Group 1
- practice exercise
- 3x over course of two days
- Group 2
- two slightly different practice routines
- Group 3
- Control
- 1 practice session
- Group 1
- Results
- Variety works best
- Slightly modified versions
- Learn more
- Learn faster (2x faster)
- Notes
- Not radically alter your practice
- too different, no gain
- Not switching from batting to fielding
- hitting a different sort of pitch
- Hobbies can help your work
- Massed Practice
- Distributed Practice
- Deliberate Practice
4. Fast & Slow
- Daniel Kahneman
- Thinking Fast and Slow, says that, “…acquisition of skills requires
- regular environment
- adequate opportunity to practice
- rapid and unequivocal feedback
- Start with a guide
- YouTube
- Tutorials, guides
- Books about fishing
- Explore on your own
5. Tips
- Post-Op Analysis
- incident: assess chain of events that took place
- football game
- after-action review: debriefing of what happened, why it happened and how it can be done better (US Army)
- Study the material
- know how to solve problem or perform the skill
- Avoid flow
- When you feel the sensation, switch
- Review
- Mix in old material
- Mix up your practice material
- Track your progress
- Particularly for long-term strategies
- Interleaving or distributed practice
- Baddeley’s typing
- might just be too hard to implement
- Small gains
- Fail
- Push a button and see what happens
- Experiment: “productive failure”
- Learning by doing
- Experiential learning
- Distributed Practice
- Spread Out Learning Over Time
- 1 hr per day
- Quiz yourself before test
- Not underling or rereading
- When matters
- when you study or practice is important
- internal clock
- learn best when we do so before sleep
- night or naps
- Be unique: whatever works for you
-
-
-
- witching from batting to fielding
- hitting a different sort of pitch
- Hobbies can help your work
- witching from batting to fielding
-
-
- Tips
- Study the material
- know how to solve problem or perform the skill
- Avoid flow
- When you feel the sensation, switch
- Review
- Mix in old material
- Mix up your practice material
- Track your progress
- Particularly for long-term strategies
- Interleaving or distributed practice
- Baddeley’s typing
- might just be too hard to implement
- Small gains
- Daniel Kahneman
- Thinking Fast and Slow, says that, “…acquisition of skills requires
- regular environment
- adequate opportunity to practice
- rapid and unequivocal feedback
- Thinking Fast and Slow, says that, “…acquisition of skills requires
- Start with a guide
- YouTube
- Tutorials, guides
- Books about fishing
- Explore on your own
- Fail
- Push a button and see what happens
- Experiment: “productive failure”
- Learning by doing
- Experiential learning
- Distributed Practice
- Spread Out Learning Over Time
- 1 hr per day
- Quiz yourself before test
- Delayed retrieval
- Not underling or rereading
- When matters
- When you study or practice is important
- internal clock
- learn best when we do so before sleep
- night or naps
- Be unique
- Whatever works for you
- Study the material