2012, Number 24
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“Normal People Don’t Do Deliberate Practice”
Guy Edson, ASCA Staff
First of all, there is nothing wrong with being “normal”--- it’s just that in athletics, and in scholarship, and in arts, and in business, and in charity, and in faith, and in relationships we take note of the EXTRA-ordinary person, sometimes with a bit of envy, but more often with a big smile, being happy for the person and what they have been able to accomplish. What sets apart the normal from the extra-ordinary is oftentimes the result of deliberate practice.
Psychologist K. Anders Ericsson,
a professor of Psychology at Florida State University, has been a
pioneer in researching deliberate practice and what it means. According
to Ericsson: "People believe that because expert performance is
qualitatively different from normal performance the expert performer
must be endowed with characteristics qualitatively different from those
of normal adults… We agree that expert performance is qualitatively
different from normal performance and even that expert performers have
characteristics and abilities that are qualitatively different from or
at least outside the range of those of normal adults. However, we deny
that these differences are immutable, that is, due to innate talent. …we
argue that the differences between expert performers and normal adults
reflect a life-long period of deliberate effort to improve performance
in a specific domain."
“deliberate effort”
One
of Ericsson's core findings is that how expert one becomes at a skill
has more to do with how one practices than with merely performing a
skill a large number of times. An expert breaks down the skills that are
required to be expert and focuses on improving those skill chunks
during practice or day-to-day activities, often paired with immediate
coaching feedback.
One
time I said to our senior team, “We are now going to do 39 turns and in
between each turn you have about 18 yards of swimming for deliberate,
and conscious thought to evaluate your turn and make an adjustment for
the next one.” Most just swam a 1000 free.
Swimming
is sometimes too coach dominated taking away the opportunity for the
athletes to connect the dots on their own. Counsilman said, During the
initial learning stage the person much use the higher centers of his
brain (the cerebral cortex) to perform the movement. He literally
thinks out his task.”
“THINKS OUT THE TASK.”
Over
the years I have had a handful of swimmers who deliberately
practiced. They often get in the water early or stay late. They try
new things. They’re conscious. They show me things and they ask
questions. They remind me of great basketball players who go to the gym
for a few hours when no one else is around and practice deliberate hoop
shooting.
Sorry
to say that for most swimmers it’s just “swim a thousand free.” But
for the extra-ordinary ones it’s, “39 deliberate turns, thinking and
evaluating.” Ready go.”
Guy
Edson has been on staff of the American Swimming Coaches Association
since 1988 and is a part time swimming coach with a local club team.
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