Thursday, November 24, 2011

5 – “Practice without improvement is meaningless.” – Chuck Knox


Article/Link: Sorry Strivers: Talent Matters by David Z. Hambrick and Elizabeth J Meinz. Published: 19th November, 2011; Accessed: 24th November, 2011. 


Practice makes you better. It certainly doesn’t make you perfect. And even if perfection were possible to achieve in our Earthly incarnations, it wouldn’t just be practice that got you there.

A few years ago, psychologist K. Anders Ericsson lead a study to determine whether practice truly is the key to success; whether it is, in fact, more important than God-given skills. For the past few decades, people have been of the opinion that for truly outstanding achievements, people have to practice, practice, and then practice some more. People believe that the only key to success is hard work. People have also been deluding themselves. Ericsson’s study, in which he and his co-workers compared the ability of violinists at a music academy and came to the conclusion that the students who played more often were the “best”, did not account for the difference between correlation and causation.

Malcolm Gladwell and David Brooks have suggested that IQ only matters up to a certain point, and that beyond that, practice is what separates the good from the brilliant. And while this might bring a warm, fuzzy feeling in our hearts – we can all achieve incredible success if we work for it! – it simply isn’t true.

Recent research shows that children who display high levels of intelligence at a young age will go on to become adults that tend do far better with their lives than the ones that don’t. Intellectual ability determines success. And what of the violinists? Chances are, it was their natural gift for playing the violin that caused them to earn an interest in the subject and practice more often.  

“If you took two pianists with the same amount of practice, but different levels of working memory capacity, it’s likely that the one higher in working memory capacity would have performed considerably better on [a] sight-reading task.”

Practice does matter, but not nearly as much as innate talent.

Psychology often has to face the nature vs. nurture debate – does what we are born with determine who we are? Perhaps not, but it does determine what we’re good at.  Sometimes, hard as it is, we have to accept that natural brilliance trumps long, hard years of experience.

Or do we? As a child growing up, though I never gave the subject much thought, I always believed that yes, inherent skill and intelligence determine your lot in life. Reading this article, however, made me really think about the question: does talent matter more than practice?

I would have always answered yes before, but the timing of the article could not have been more ironic. I recently had an assignment for a class, and I spent hours practicing and memorizing the darned thing. Hours. I have never dedicated that much time to a simple presentation before – I think my teacher just has an unfortunate habit of somehow challenging me to try and do better than I can – and...I don’t know. It went fairly well in that I didn’t forget any of my lines, but I don’t know if it was as good as I’d have liked it to be. I felt as if some of my practices went better than the final performance in terms of emotional delivery and enunciation, and that really was a blow. But here’s the thing: when I don’t manage to finish my last-minute cramming on a test, and then do badly, I always tend to think, “Ah, if only…” With this, I’d practiced all I could. The only thing that could have gone better was my performance at that very moment – and there were no regrets about the past. There was no “I could have just…”

In a way, I was disappointed when I finished. I immediately wanted the chance to go back up and repeat everything that I had just said, but better – and then I realized that I would never be satisfied. There would always be something better, someone better, and the competition with myself and the world would never be over. I learned a lesson, though. I finally realized that I can refuse to drop out of the running. So what if I’m not always the best? Perhaps the truth is, practice is the answer. I believe in myself, and I believe that I have the ability to excel in the few things I actually care about. If I care enough, and work hard enough, I refuse to accept that the results on a sheet of paper that some psychologists created will tell me how well I can or can’t do.

I don’t believe that science can ever fully explain or understand the world. And the flashing shocks striking as quickly and unexpectedly as lightning, the broken rules dangling over a cliff, are what make life interesting.





Vocabulary:

·         Pioneering
o   “In a pioneering study, the Florida State University psychologist K. Anders Ericsson and his colleagues asked violin students at a music academy to estimate the amount of time they had devoted to practice since they started playing.”
o   To pioneer: To develop or be the first to use or apply a new method, area of knowledge, or activity. 1520s, "foot soldier who prepares the way for the army," from M.Fr. pionnier, from O.Fr. paonier "foot soldier" (11c.), from peon. Figurative sense of "person who goes first or does something first" is from c.1600. 
o   Well-established as the pioneers of the field of revolutionizing school songs, the Oakies surprised us once again with a phenomenal Fall Musical.

·         Faculty
o   “By age 20, the students whom the faculty nominated as the “best” players had accumulated an average of over 10,000 hours, compared with just under 8,000 hours for the “good” players and not even 5,000 hours for the least skilled.”
o   Faculty: Staff. late 14c., "ability, means, resources," from O.Fr. faculté (14c.) "skill, accomplishment, learning," and directly from L. facultatem (nom.facultas) "power, ability, wealth," from *facli-tat-s, from facilis. Academic sense "branch of knowledge" probably was the earliest in English (attested in Anglo-Latin from late 12c.), on notion of "ability in knowledge." Originally each department was a faculty; the use in reference to the whole teaching staff of a college dates from 1767.
o   The Woodstock faculty seems to spend an inordinate amount of time ‘discussing’ students out of school – the results are seldom pleasant.

·         Meritocratic
o   “Those findings have been enthusiastically championed, perhaps because of their meritocratic appeal: what seems to separate the great from the merely good is hard work, not intellectual ability.”
o   Meritocracy: a form of social system in which power goes to those with superior intellects. Coined 1958 by Michael Young and used in title of his book, "The Rise of the Meritocracy"; from merit + ending from aristocracy, etc. 
o   In spite of its location in India, a country well known for its meritocratic schools, Woodstock has managed to avoid meritocracy via its wide range of extracurricular activities. 

Saturday, November 19, 2011

4 - Down in the dumps


Article/Link: Alcohol and Sleeping Pills – A Strange Combination by Matthew J. Edlund. Published: November 17th, 2011. Accessed: November 19th, 2011.


We’re a depressed world. What does it say about us that we are so very, very fond of depressants? Come on – there are plenty of drugs that get you phenomenally high. Instead, most people choose to drown themselves in alcohol and their own misery.

The recent trend is to add sleeping pills to the mix. Valium, Ambien, Clonazepan, and the like are popular pills that hold the delightful promise of knocking you out. There’s a problem here, though – and it’s not just the alarming fondness for depression. Alcohol and sleeping pills are a combination that can kill you – an even worse pairing than drinking and driving.

Both sleeping pills and alcohol slow down your nervous system. Separately, they have the effect of calming you and lowering your inhibitions respectively. Together, they can kill. And even if you survive the force of destruction that is that duo, your chances of being anxious and depressed are greatly increased, as is the likelihood of your functioning at a subpar level the next day. The combination can also cause you to stay in a realm half-way between being asleep and awake. Sleepwalking and acting under the influence of the depressants is not uncommon. And in the case of Thomas Gatz, a paramedic in Chicago, sleepdriving is apparently also a very real phenomenon. Gatz, stone cold drunk, managed to drive and crash his Honda into a couple of cars, injuring one woman. He has claimed that the Ambien that he took was to blame.

Sleeping pills themselves do NOT emulate natural sleep. In spite of some benzodiazepines hitting all three benzodiazepine receptors in the brain, they cannot fully mimic the effects of normal sleep, and tend to cause more sleepwalking. That is not to say that taking the rare sleeping pill is harmful – it just shouldn’t be used with alcohol.

Now, I have nothing against either sleeping pills or alcohol. I can appreciate both their values. But personally, in a completely, absolutely, hypothetical situation, I’d prefer to be euphoric.  Maybe it’s just my cheerful personality.





Vocabulary:

·         Sparse
o   “Studies of them are relatively sparse, as researchers tend to look at one drug at a time.”
o   Sparse: rare. 1727, from L. sparsus "scattered," pp. of spargere "to scatter, spread," from PIE base *(s)pregh- "to jerk, scatter" (cf. Skt. parjanya-"rain, rain god," Avestan fra-sparega "branch, twig," lit. "that which is jerked off a tree," O.N. freknur "freckles," Swed. dial. sprygg"brisk, active," Lith. sprogti "shoot, bud," O.Ir. arg "a drop").
o   I am beginning to feel as if common sense is a sparse and precious commodity at Woodstock.

·         Inadvertent
o   “It was the inadvertent cause of death of Brian Epstein, the Beatles' manager in 1967, and many famous and not so famous media folks since.”
o   Inadvertent: unintentional. mid-15c., from M.Fr. inadvertance (14c.), from Scholastic L. inadvertentia, from in- “not” + advertentia, from L. advertere"to direct one's attention to," lit. "to turn toward" 
o   Though the side-effect of having eleventh-graders learn about the Combine was inadvertent – probably – it remains a fact that students have taken to defying the system far more often than before.

·         Benzodiazepine
o   “Ambien is an exceedingly popular drug. It works by hitting one of the three benzodiazepine receptors in the brain.”
o   Benzodiazepine: Any of a class of heterocyclic organic compounds used as tranquilizers, such as Librium and Valium. 1934, from benzo- + di + azo- + epine, a suffix denoting a seven-membered ring, from (h)ep(ta).
o   In my humble opinion, some drama queens, not all of them from the female population, could truly benefit from being knocked out by a nice, tranquilizing Benzodiazepine pill. 


Friday, November 11, 2011

3 - Begging the question



Article/Link: ‘Find X’ and other unusual college essay questions by Valerie Strauss. Published: 11th August, 2011; Accessed: 8th November, 2011. 



What, exactly, is the point of college essays? Many of us eleventh graders – and plenty of high school students across the planet, I’m willing to bet – have been pondering that very question. Journalist Valerie Strauss attempts to shed some light on the situation.

In 1975, a Common Application form was created in the United States. The point? Students wouldn’t have to burden themselves with writing multiple essays for each and every college they applied to. Well, fine. One essay per college. Still, that remains a LOT of writing. Hence the brilliant idea of a Common Application. Unfortunately, colleges seem to have once again digressed from that noble goal of saving students untold torture.

In recent times, colleges “seem to try to outdo each other and themselves each year with clever essay prompts. And that means applicants have a lot of essays to write.” Strauss lists examples of “clever” topics for essays from various colleges. And what, I reiterate, is the point? Are essays there to ‘get to know you?’ Why, would you like a cup of tea to go with that? And a platter of biting sarcasm? Or is the purpose of a college essay to gauge a student’s writing ability? Creativity? For crying out loud, students can demonstrate all that perfectly well with a Common Application. It’s the students who are attempting to gain admission – who, exactly, are the colleges trying to get kudos from for their brilliant and witty questions?

I refuse to believe that any sane person can expect to accurately understand the inner workings of a teenager’s mind, their secret thoughts, or the (inappropriate) subject matter of their dreams via two sides of a single sheet of paper. I also refuse to believe that they actually care. No complete stranger wants to ‘know you.’ If they do, it’s just creepy. So what are the remaining options? Writing skills and creativity? Yes, because never, in the history of schooling, has anyone come across shameless plagiarising. As suggested in “The China Conundrum,” it is very easy for students to have someone else write their essays for them. An interview might be much more productive.

Oh, darn. I’ve come back full circle. What, exactly, is the point of college essays? Remind me to never negate all possible answers to a question I pose again.





Vocabulary:

·         Throes
o   “High school seniors (and/or their parent) are now in the throes of college application essay writing, laboring over every word, punctuation and thought.”
o   Throes: violent pangs of suffering. c.1200, throwe "pain, pang of childbirth, agony of death," possibly from O.E. þrawan "twist, turn, writhe,” or altered from O.E. þrea (gen. þrawe) "affliction, pang, evil, threat" (related to þrowian "to suffer"), from P.Gmc. *thrawo (cf. M.H.G. dro "threat," Ger.drohen "to threaten"). Modern spelling first recorded 1610s.
o   Woodstock juniors are now in the throes of college application essay writing, labouring over every word, punctuation and thought. Sorry. Couldn’t resist.
§  Lost in the throes of passion[ate acting], the cast of Brigadoon did not notice the ceiling of Parker Hall as it started to collapse on their heads.

·         Dilemma
o   “Evaluate a significant experience, achievement, risk you have taken, or ethical dilemma you have faced and its impact on you.”
o   Dilemma: A situation in which a difficult choice has to be made between two or more alternatives, esp. equally undesirable ones. 1520s, from L.L. dilemma, from Gk. dilemma "double proposition," a technical term in rhetoric, from di- "two" + lemma "premise, anything received or taken," from root of lambanein "to take.”
o   The eternal dilemma that all Woodstock students face is this: to skip Chapel and risk detention, or to serve the hours of detention late on a Sunday evening?

·         Overanalyse
o   “Don’t overanalyze.”
o   Overanalyse: To examine methodically and in detail the constitution or structure of (something, esp. information), typically for purposes of explanation and interpretation, in an overly excessive and often counterproductive manner. c.1600, "to dissect," from Fr. analyser, from analyse. Literature sense is attested from 1610s; meaning in chemistry dates from 1660s. General sense of "to examine closely" dates from 1809; psychological sense is from 1909.
o   Here at Woodstock, we would never, ever dream of overanalysing a character, plot, or storyline.


Saturday, November 5, 2011

2 - Fast Food

 
Article/Link: Anna writes to PM, says his team will not campaign against Congress by NDTV Correspondent. Published: Nov. 01, 2011; Accessed: Nov. 02, 2011.



          Oh, no! Tragedy strikes! Breaking News: Anna Hazare is going on a fast! ... again. 

          Really? That’s what we’re reduced to for headlines? It isn’t news if everyone knows it’s going to happen. If I were working for The Times of India – or any Indian newspaper for that matter – I think I’d just copy-paste the news on Hazare, replacing only the dates. However, the monotony is not what is getting to me. I’ve just never quite understood fasts. You don’t eat…and the world changes for the better? So starving to death is a good thing. I’m a bit confused – exactly what is the message in that? Pro-anorexia (I must let my Health Class teachers know)? Or that the world is better off without you? 

           I have the utmost respect for Gandhiji, I do – which is why I am not going to launch into a series of criticisms of the entire institute of fasting. I will, however, pause to admire Hazare’s many, many, and far too many strikes.  

          Hazare has recently sent a message to the Prime Minister saying that Team Anna will not campaign against Congress in any upcoming elections. He insists that he is not trying to target any particular political party. Which is all very well, but he sent this missive in writing. No, not just for the sake of convenience and common sense. Hazare is currently in the middle of a maun-vrat, or a ‘Vow of Silence.’ He is silently protesting against…I’m not entirely sure against what any more. Oh, yeah – he’s still campaigning to get Parliament to take action against corruption. What’s the problem with that? Senior Minister Ambika Soni sums it up quite nicely: “We have said many times we will bring a strong Lokpal. I can’t understand why the repeated warnings, where is the need?” 

          I suppose Hazare is proving that silence speaks louder than words, because India is certainly responding. Team Anna was recently given 2.9 crore rupees in donations. Not content with merely shutting up, Hazare has also decided to deprive his body of food. Well, maybe he’s just going on a diet. He’s trying to turn into Gandhiji. 


         


          In his letter to the Prime Minister, Hazare threatened another hunger strike if the Winter Session of Parliament does not pass the Lokpal bill. As the author of this article puts it, “And, says the 74-year-old Gandhian, he will fast again.” Oh. No. Not again. Yeah, I really care. 

          Silence is golden, but remember, duct tape is silver. And food is fodder, but no fodder at all is fodder for campaigns. Words to live by.





 
Vocabulary:



  • Ombudsman
    • “Named for a new ombudsman agency that it creates, the Lokpal Bill is meant to combat corruption among public servants.”
    • Ombudsman: An official appointed to investigate individuals' complaints against maladministration, esp. that of public authorities. 1959, from Swed. ombudsman, lit. "commission man" (specifically, in ref. to the office of justitieombudsmannen, which hears and investigates complaints by individuals against abuses of the state); cognate with O.N. umboðsmaðr, from umboð "commission" (from um- "around" + boð"command") + maðr "man."
    • After a series of complaints against history teachers, an ombudsman body was created to look into the school’s administration’s hiring policies.


  • Spurn
    • “The team will tour states headed for elections and will ask voters to spurn corrupt parties and politicians and vote for those who stand for clean governance.”
    • Spurn: reject with disdain. O.E. spurnan "to kick (away), reject, scorn, despise," from P.Gmc. *spurnanan (cf. O.S., O.H.G. spurnan, O.Fris. spurna, O.N. sporna "to kick"), from PIE base *spere- "ankle" (cf. M.Du. spoor "track of an animal," Gk. sphyron "ankle," L. spernere "to reject, spurn," Skt. sphurati"kicks," M.Ir. seir "heel").
    • The school has continued to spurn any advances or offers made by CLEAN employees.


  • Emphatically
    • “In a recent Lok Sabha bye-election in Hisar, Anna's close aides campaigned emphatically against the Congress, drawing much criticism for singling out one party.”
    • Emphatically: forcefully; clearly. 1708, from Gk. emphatikos, variant of emphantikos, from emphainein 
    • The students emphatically refused to go through another week of torture like that.