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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Being an expert at something really pays off. Just how good are top performers compared to everybody else? Research shows in high complexity1 jobs like professional and sales roles, the top 10 percent produce 80 percent more than average and 700 percent more than the bottom 10 percent. But as I'm sure you're aware, becoming the best ain't easy. As Bobby Knight2 once said, "Everybody has the will to win; few people have the will to prepare to win."
想要成为某方面的专家,那确实需要花费一番功夫。要比别人好多少才能称的上专家?一组数据来告诉你,在调查了不同行业的专家到销售人员,位于该行业顶尖的10%贡献了80%的行业成果,是该行业底层10%贡献的7倍还多。但你们也一定清楚,想要做到最好并不容易,就像Bobby Knight (著名篮球教练)所说:“每个都渴望成功,但只有少数人会为此做出准备。”
And one of the reasons why it's hard to become great is because a lot of what you've been told about how to learn, study, or train is wrong, wrong, and dead wrong. So it's time to learn how to get better at gettin' better. Whether you want to be a great public speaker, study for exams, or improve your free throws, we're going to learn what methods research and experts recommend for becoming an expert at anything.
阻碍你成功的不利因素很多,其中就有看似引导你成功的学习训练方法,实则带你误入歧途。该是学习正确方法的时候啦,不论你是想提升演讲水平,或是应试能力,亦或是更加准确的投球率,以下方法均可适用。
深度解读:如何有效学习?如何成为专家?
专业度预测
I'm going to ask you one question. And this question will probably predict just how good you'll end up being at whatever it is you're passionate4 about. Ready?" How long are you going to be doing this?" Yeah, doing something for a long time probably correlates with being decent at it but that's not the point. Committing in advance to being in it for the long haul made all the difference. Even when practicing the same amount, those who made a long-term commitment did 400 percent better than the short-termers.
问你个问题,来判断你感兴趣事情将会取得专业程度。“为了达到专业你能坚持多久?”能够长时间坚持做一件事,说明你非常适合做这件事,但这并不是重点。如果你以一个长期目标为导向,则会让你更上一层楼。
From The Talent Code:With the same amount of practice, the long-term-commitment group outperformed the short-term-commitment group by 400 percent. The long-term-commitment group, with a mere5 twenty minutes of weekly practice, progressed faster than the short-termers who practiced for an hour and a half. When long-term commitment combined with high levels of practice, skills skyrocketed.
节选《一万个小时》:训练同样的时间,长期目标小组的成绩4倍于短期小组。不仅如此,每周训练20分钟的长期目标小组比每周训练90分钟的短期目标小组的进步还要大。当长期目标小组配合高强度的训练,其成效如同坐上火箭,锐不可当。
找一个导师
Luke had Yoda. The Karate7 Kid had Mr. Miyagi. I'm sure Kung Fu Panda had somebody but I never saw that movie. You get the picture. When I spoke8 to Anders Ericsson, the professor who did the research behind the "10,000 hour rule" he said mentors9 were vital. But you knew that already. So what does the research show about mentors that most people get wrong? Merely finding someone to help you that is already an expert doesn't cut it.
就像星际大战中的卢克有绝地大师,龙威小子有宫城先生,功夫熊猫也有个师傅,虽然我没有看过电影。但是我想你明白了有个导师重要性。曾为“一万个小时理论”作调研的Aders Ericsson, 说有个导师对于成功是非常重要的。你们很多人都知道,也有导师,为什么最后的结果还是不理想,因为很多人都没有选对人。
When I spoke to Shane Snow, author of Smartcuts, he said your mentor needs to care about you. Here's Shane: In great mentorship relationships the mentor doesn't just care about the thing that you're learning, they care about how your life goes. They are with you for the long haul. They are willing to say, "No," and to tell you what you're doing is wrong. Those kinds of relationships yield outsized results in terms of future salaries and happiness.
我曾和《Smartcuts》的作者肖恩斯诺谈及此事,他的观点是导师不仅是在专业领域能帮助你的人,同时对你的生活也要有所关心。你们是长期的指导关系,在你做的不当的时候会适时阻止并且指点你。他会使你在将来的潜在收入和幸福感方面都获益。
The #3 Start with what's important
先学关键的内容
David Epstein put it simply: "The hallmark of expertise is figuring out what information is important." There are many components10 to any skill but practicing them all doesn't produce the same results. When I spoke to Tim Ferriss, bestselling author of The 4-Hour Workweek he said: Do an 80-20 analysis and ask yourself, "Which 20 percent of these things I need to learn will get me 80 percent of the results that I want?"
评判一个专家的标准就是对于重要信息判断的准确性。技能的训练有不同的方法,但达到的效果未必相同。畅销书《The 4-Hour Workweek》的作者Tim认为:二八原则可以帮助你分析,要学习哪20% 来达到80%的效果?
When Tim was learning chess from champion Josh Waitzkin (whose life was the basis for the film Searching for Bobby Fischer) they did things the opposite from how most chess instruction works. They didn't start with the beginning of a chess game. They jumped straight to key moves that are applicable to the majority of interactions on the board. This allowed Tim to hang with top players after only a few days of practice.
他师从Josh Waitzkin(基本是电影“王者之旅”的现实版)学习国际象棋,不同于先打基本功,而是在棋谱上学习足以招架大部分进攻的招式。短短几天Tim 就可以和高手对弈了。
The #4 "Train like you fight"
把每一次训练都当成实战
When I spoke to Special Forces Lieutenant11 Colonel Mike Kenny he told me, "Train like you fight." You want your practice to be as similar to the real thing as possible. And research backs Mike up. Not only will you be better prepared, but you learn much better when the context you practice in matches the context you will eventually perform in. How strong is this effect? Insanely strong.
当我和特种部队上尉Mike Kenny 取经时,他说秘诀是“把每一次训练都当成实战”。研究结果支持他的说法,你需要的不仅仅是充分的准备,只有自己带入真实的情境来训练才能最终取得成绩。那要多真实?越真实越好。
The #5 Use "desirable difficulty"
运用“适当增加难度”来复习
Reviewing material is one of the most popular forms of learning. Guess what? It's also one of the least effective. Researchers call this "the fluency12 illusion." Just because it's easy to remember right now doesn't mean it will stay that way. "Desirable difficulty" means that the harder you work trying to retrieve13 something from memory, the better you learn. Don't merely reread stuff. Practice like a medical student and quiz yourself with flashcards. You're not going to learn much passively. Research show re-reading material four times was not nearly as effective as reading it once and writing a summary.
复习是学习的重要一环,那我要说是最没有效率的一环呢?研究学家称它为“熟练的假象”你记得某个知识并不代表着在任何情况下你都能熟练运用。“适当增加难度”的意义在于,你越难回忆起某个知识,你就会记得越牢。不要就简单的复读,可以学习医学院的学生利用闪卡来测试自己。不要被动的学习,研究表明,一本书你读四遍的效果不如你读一遍然后写一篇读书小结来的好。
You need to struggle. Whether it's memorizing information or practicing a sport or skill, you want your practice to be challenging. When I spoke to Dan Coyle, bestselling author of The Talent Code, he said: We learn when we're in our discomfort14 zone. When you're struggling, that's when you're getting smarter. The more time you spend there, the faster you learn. It's better to spend a very, very high quality ten minutes, or even 10 seconds, than it is to spend a mediocre15 hour.
你得受点挫折,不管是在记忆方面或是锻炼某项运动或其他技能。要尽量做些有挑战性的任务。就像《一万个小时天才》的作者Dan Colye所说,在我们舒适区以外,我们最能学到东西。就是俗话说的“吃一堑,长一智”,花越多的时间钻研,你就会学习得越快。聚精会神的十分钟,哪怕是10秒钟,比一个小时的磨洋工要有效率的多。
#6 The Get fast, negative feedback
快速从失败中吸取经验
One of the three key components to "10,000 hours of deliberate practice" is feedback. Without it you don't know if you're improving or what you need to work on next. And don't just listen to me because I read the nerdy research. The most un-nerdy people in the world are on the same page. When I spoke to Navy SEAL platoon commander James Waters, he said feedback is critical.
关于“一万小时刻意训练”三个要素的其中之一就是反馈。如果没有反馈那么你就不知道自己哪里需要提高,下一步的训练计划要怎么制定。也不必只听我的一家之言,事实上,那些取得成绩的人都知道反馈的重要性。比如海军海豹突击队指挥官James Water 就认同反馈的重要性。
After every mission, SEALs do a review of what happened to get feedback. Do they all just congratulate each other? No, they spend 90 percent of their time on the negative: what they can do better next time. And there's another vital source of feedback: yourself. Always take some time to reflect on how you're doing.
每次任务结束之后,队员们就会对发生的事情进行意见收集反馈。难道他们仅仅是为了庆祝任务完成,当然不是,他们90%的时间都花在对于问题研究,下一次怎样才能做的更好。还有一项重要的反馈就是自我评价,每次对于自己的表现进行评价。
The #7 Study less. Test more.
少学多练
Get your nose out of that book. Avoid the classroom. Whatever it is you want to be the best at, be doing it. Here's Dan Coyle:Our brains evolved to learn by doing things, not by hearing about them. This is one of the reasons that, for a lot of skills, it's much better to spend about two thirds of your time testing yourself on it rather than absorbing it. There's a rule of two thirds. If you want to, say, memorize a passage, it's better to spend 30 percent of your time reading it, and the other 70 percent of your time testing yourself on that knowledge.
不要死盯着书本,也不要去教室。做你任何想做且能做好的事情。Dan Colye (《一万个小时天才理论》作者) 认为,我们大脑通过练习来学习,而不仅仅是靠听,大部分技能,要花三分之二的时间来练习,不仅仅是单纯的学习。这就是三分之二规律。比如说,你要记忆一片文章,花30%的时间来读,70%的时间来测试你是否记得里面的内容。
The #8 Naps are steroids for your brain
小睡更有助于大脑活跃
If you're not getting enough sleep, you're not learning as well as you could be. In fact, research shows there is a correlation16 between student grades and average amount of sleep.
如果你睡不够,你也会学不好。事实上有研究表面,学生的学习成绩与平均睡眠时间长短正相关。
Via NurtureShock: Teens who received As averaged about 15 more minutes sleep than the B students, who in turn averaged 15 more minutes than the C's, and so on. Wahlstrom's data was an almost perfect replication of results from an earlier study of over 3,000 Rhode Island high schoolers by Brown's Carskadon. Certainly, these are averages, but the consistency17 of the two studies stands out. Every 15 minutes counts.Too busy to get eight hours? I hear you. Naps to the rescue!
NurtureShock 如是说:青少年学习成绩平均得A的学生比平均成绩得B的学生多睡15分钟,平均成绩B的比平均成绩得C的平均多睡15分钟,以此类推。Wahlstrom所的出的数据结论与之前由Brown 选取罗得岛高中3000人所得出的结论如出一辙。15分钟所体现的价值(划分的层次)。睡不满8个小时,懂你。那就让小睡来拯救你。
Sum up
总结
Here's how to be an expert at anything:
8大条助力你的专家之路
1. Be in it for the long haul.
制定长期目标,让你事半功倍。
2. Find a mentor.
找一个靠谱的师傅。持之以恒。
3. Start with what's important.
学习关键步骤
4. "Train like you fight."
把每一次训练都当成实战
5. Use "desirable difficulty."
适当增加记忆难度,更好锻炼大脑。
6. Get fast, negative feedback.
快速从失败中吸取经验
7. Study less. Test more.
少学多练
8. Naps are steroids for your brain.
小睡更有助于保持大脑活跃
So you do all eight things and practice your tush off and now you're The Master. Know what else you are?
学到了上面的技巧勤加练习,你也会成为大师。除此以外,你还会怎样?
Happier.
变得更加快乐
When you're good at something and you do it often, the result isn't just promotions18 or more wins on the tennis court, you also smile more often. People who deliberately19 exercise their "signature strengths" — talents that set them apart from others — on a daily basis became significantly happier for months. It's not lonely at the top. It's happy.
如果你变得擅长某项技能,而且又经常做的话,那结果不仅仅是升职,或是摘得更多的网球比赛桂冠,你会变得更加快乐。天才和普通人的区别,觉得自己的影响力变大了,日积月累,成就感加倍。高处不会不胜寒,能做到最好是让人欢欣鼓舞的一件事。
点击收听单词发音
1 complexity | |
n.复杂(性),复杂的事物 | |
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2 knight | |
n.骑士,武士;爵士 | |
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3 expertise | |
n.专门知识(或技能等),专长 | |
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4 passionate | |
adj.热情的,热烈的,激昂的,易动情的,易怒的,性情暴躁的 | |
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5 mere | |
adj.纯粹的;仅仅,只不过 | |
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6 mentor | |
n.指导者,良师益友;v.指导 | |
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7 karate | |
n.空手道(日本的一种徒手武术) | |
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8 spoke | |
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说 | |
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9 mentors | |
n.(无经验之人的)有经验可信赖的顾问( mentor的名词复数 )v.(无经验之人的)有经验可信赖的顾问( mentor的第三人称单数 ) | |
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10 components | |
(机器、设备等的)构成要素,零件,成分; 成分( component的名词复数 ); [物理化学]组分; [数学]分量; (混合物的)组成部分 | |
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11 lieutenant | |
n.陆军中尉,海军上尉;代理官员,副职官员 | |
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12 fluency | |
n.流畅,雄辩,善辩 | |
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13 retrieve | |
vt.重新得到,收回;挽回,补救;检索 | |
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14 discomfort | |
n.不舒服,不安,难过,困难,不方便 | |
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15 mediocre | |
adj.平常的,普通的 | |
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16 correlation | |
n.相互关系,相关,关连 | |
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17 consistency | |
n.一贯性,前后一致,稳定性;(液体的)浓度 | |
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18 promotions | |
促进( promotion的名词复数 ); 提升; 推广; 宣传 | |
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19 deliberately | |
adv.审慎地;蓄意地;故意地 | |
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