Read
the article “A Star is Born”
and answer the following questions. If there are any terms or concepts you do
not understand, look them up and define them before you answer your questions.
1) Summarize
the “A Star is
Born”
article. Include the problem/situation/idea
that was being addressed, why the problem/situation/idea occurred, impacts of
the problem/situation/idea, and the various methods applied to alleviate the
problem.
2) The article
discussed the idea of talent and whether it was more important than other
aspects. What are your thoughts? Do you think talent is the real indicator of
a particular success at something or does success rely on other factors? Why?
New
York Times
May 7, 2006
Freakonomics
A Star Is Made
By
STEPHEN J. DUBNER and STEVEN D. LEVITT
The Birth-Month Soccer
Anomaly
If you were to examine the birth certificates of every soccer
player in next month's World Cup tournament, you would most likely find a
noteworthy quirk: elite soccer players are more likely to have been born in the
earlier months of the year than in the later months. If you then examined the
European national youth teams that feed the World Cup and professional ranks,
you would find this quirk to be even more pronounced. On recent English teams,
for instance, half of the elite teenage soccer players were born in January,
February or March, with the other half spread out over the remaining 9 months.
In Germany, 52 elite youth players were born in the first three months of the
year, with just 4 players born in the last three.
What might account for this anomaly? Here are a few guesses: a)
certain astrological signs confer superior soccer skills; b) winter-born babies
tend to have higher oxygen capacity, which increases soccer stamina; c)
soccer-mad parents are more likely to conceive children in springtime, at the
annual peak of soccer mania; d) none of the above.
Anders Ericsson, a 58-year-old psychology professor at Florida
State University, says he believes strongly in "none of the above."
He is the ringleader of what might be called the Expert Performance Movement, a
loose coalition of scholars trying to answer an important and seemingly
primordial question: When someone is very good at a given thing, what is it
that actually makes him good?
Ericsson, who grew up in Sweden, studied nuclear engineering until
he realized he would have more opportunity to conduct his own research if he
switched to psychology. His first experiment, nearly 30 years ago, involved
memory: training a person to hear and then repeat a random series of numbers.
"With the first subject, after about 20 hours of training, his digit span
had risen from 7 to 20," Ericsson recalls. "He kept improving, and
after about 200 hours of training he had risen to over 80 numbers."
This success, coupled with later research showing that memory
itself is not genetically determined, led Ericsson to conclude that the act of
memorizing is more of a cognitive exercise than an intuitive one. In other
words, whatever innate differences two people may exhibit in their abilities to
memorize, those differences are swamped by how well each person
"encodes" the information. And the best way to learn how to encode
information meaningfully, Ericsson determined, was a process known as
deliberate practice.
Deliberate practice entails more than simply repeating a task —
playing a C-minor scale 100 times, for instance, or hitting tennis serves until
your shoulder pops out of its socket. Rather, it involves setting specific
goals, obtaining immediate feedback and concentrating as much on technique as
on outcome.
Ericsson and his colleagues have thus taken to studying expert
performers in a wide range of pursuits, including soccer, golf, surgery, piano
playing, Scrabble, writing, chess, software design, stock picking and darts.
They gather all the data they can, not just performance statistics and
biographical details but also the results of their own laboratory experiments
with high achievers.
Their work, compiled in the "Cambridge Handbook of Expertise
and Expert Performance," a 900-page academic book that will be published
next month, makes a rather startling assertion: the trait we commonly call
talent is highly overrated. Or, put another way, expert
performers — whether in memory or surgery, ballet or computer programming — are
nearly always made, not born. And yes, practice does make perfect. These
may be the sort of clichés that parents are fond of whispering to their
children. But these particular clichés just happen to be true.
Ericsson's research suggests a third cliché as well: when it comes
to choosing a life path, you should do what you love — because if you don't
love it, you are unlikely to work hard enough to get very good. Most people
naturally don't like to do things they aren't "good" at. So they
often give up, telling themselves they simply don't possess the talent for math
or skiing or the violin. But what they really lack is the desire to be good and
to undertake the deliberate practice that would make them better.
"I think the most general claim here," Ericsson says of
his work, "is that a lot of people believe there are some inherent limits
they were born with. But there is surprisingly little hard evidence that anyone
could attain any kind of exceptional performance without spending a lot of time
perfecting it." This is not to say that all people have equal potential. Michael Jordan, even if he hadn't spent countless hours in
the gym, would still have been a better basketball player than most of us. But
without those hours in the gym, he would never have become the player he was.
Ericsson's conclusions, if accurate, would seem to have broad
applications. Students should be taught to follow their interests earlier in
their schooling, the better to build up their skills and acquire meaningful
feedback. Senior citizens should be encouraged to acquire new skills,
especially those thought to require "talents" they previously
believed they didn't possess.
And it would probably pay to rethink a great deal of medical
training. Ericsson has noted that most doctors actually perform worse the
longer they are out of medical school. Surgeons, however, are an exception.
That's because they are constantly exposed to two key elements of deliberate
practice: immediate feedback and specific goal-setting.
The same is not true for, say, a mammographer.
When a doctor reads a mammogram, she doesn't know for certain if there is
breast cancer or not. She will be able to know only weeks later, from a biopsy,
or years later, when no cancer develops. Without meaningful feedback, a
doctor's ability actually deteriorates over time. Ericsson suggests a new mode
of training. "Imagine a situation where a doctor could diagnose mammograms
from old cases and immediately get feedback of the correct diagnosis for each
case," he says. "Working in such a learning environment, a doctor
might see more different cancers in one day than in a couple of years of normal
practice."
If nothing else, the insights of Ericsson and his Expert
Performance compatriots can explain the riddle of why so many elite soccer
players are born early in the year.
Since youth sports are organized by age bracket, teams inevitably
have a cutoff birth date. In the European youth soccer leagues, the cutoff date
is Dec. 31. So when a coach is assessing two players in the same age bracket,
one who happened to have been born in January and the other in December, the
player born in January is likely to be bigger, stronger, more
mature. Guess which player the coach is more likely to pick? He may be
mistaking maturity for ability, but he is making his selection nonetheless. And
once chosen, those January-born players are the ones who, year after year,
receive the training, the deliberate practice and the feedback — to say nothing
of the accompanying self-esteem — that will turn them into elites.
This may be bad news if you are a rabid soccer mom or dad whose
child was born in the wrong month. But keep practicing: a child conceived on
this Sunday in early May would probably be born by
next February, giving you a considerably better chance of watching the 2030
World Cup from the family section.
Stephen J. Dubner and Steven D. Levitt
are the authors of "Freakonomics: A Rogue
Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything." More information on the
research behind this column is at www.freakonomics.com.