Deliberate Practice: Building confidence vs practicing
A few weeks ago I wrote about the learning to cycle dependency graph which described some of the skills required to become proficient at riding a bike. 
While weāve been practicing various skills/sub skills Iāve often found myself saying the following:
if itās not hard youāre not practicing
me, April 2015
i.e. you should find the skill youāre currently practicing difficult otherwise youāre not stretching yourself and therefore arenāt getting better.
For example, in cycling you could be very comfortable riding with both hands on the handle bars and find using one hand a struggle. However, if you donāt practice that you wonāt be able to indicate and turn corners.
This ties in with all my reading about deliberate practice which suggests that the type of exercises you do while deliberately practicing arenāt intended to be fun and are meant to expose your lack of knowledge.
In an ideal world we would spend all our time practicing these challenging skills but in reality thereās some part of us that wants to feel that weāre actually improving by spending some of the time doing things that weāre good at. Doing things youāre not good at is a bit of a slog as well so we might find that we have less motivation for this type of thing.
We therefore need to find a balance between doing challenging exercises and having fun building something or writing code that we already know how to do. Iāve found the best way to do this is to combine the two types of work into mini projects which contain some tasks that weāre already good at and some that require us to struggle.
For me this might involved cleaning up and importing a data set into Neo4j, which Iām comfortable with, and combining that with something else that I want to learn.
For example in the middle of last year I did some meetup analysis which involved creating a Neo4j graph of Londonās NoSQL meetups and learning a bit about R, dplyr and linear regression along the way.
In January I built a How I met your mother graph and then spent a few weeks learning various algorithms for extracting topics from free text to give even more ways to explore the dataset.
Most recently Iāve been practicing exercises from Think Bayes and while itās good practice I think Iād probably spend more time doing it if I linked it into a mini project with something Iām already comfortable with.
Iāll go off and have a think what that should be!
| Reference: | Deliberate Practice: Building confidence vs practicing from our NCG partner Mark Needham at the Mark Needham Blog blog. |
