After some limited training and experience - frequently less than 50 hours for most recreational activities ... an individual’s performance is adapted to the typical situational demands and is increasingly automated, and they lose conscious control over aspects of their behavior and are no longer able to make specific intentional adjustments. ... When performance has reached this level of automaticity and effortless execution, additional experience will not improve the accuracy of behavior nor refine the structure of the mediating mechanisms, and consequently, the amount of accumulated experience will not be related to higher levels of performance.
In direct contrast, aspiring experts continues to improve their performance as a function of more experience because it is coupled with DP. The key challenge for aspiring expert performers is to avoid the arrested development associated with automaticity. These individuals purposefully counteract tendencies toward automaticity by actively setting new goals and higher performance standards, which require them to increase speed, accuracy, and control over their actions.
Based on recent advances in the scientific analysis of reproducibly superior (expert) performance, we know that superior performance does not automatically develop ... Superior performance requires the acquisition of complex integrated systems of representations for the execution, monitoring, planning, and analyses of performance. Educators should therefore create training opportunities for DP, appropriate for a given individual at given level of skill development.
lots available online but it tends to be fairly advanced — John de Overa
For example how to break down and actually learn methods, the importance of the treble - basically "The Dummy's Guide to Method Ringing" — John de Overa
There is plenty of scope to improve the way the skills of ringing are taught, but that's not enough on its own. — John Harrison
Once a band gets to that point it is very difficult for anyone to escape — John Harrison
They are encouraged to accept the limited info they are given within the small tower bubble where they find themselves. — John Harrison
The New Ringer's Book our goal was to provide information they might not be told — John Harrison
"New ringer" undersells it I think, there's material in there that's still very relevant after the initial stages. — John de Overa
We pretty much had a plan in advance for all of the students — Simon Linford
The ARA will also have follow up in that those who put forward young ringers to come have now been sent feedback on their students and what the next steps for them in their local area ought to be. — Simon Linford
So the concept of this Deliberate Practice and Expert Performance is definitely possible, but it takes very great effort. — Simon Linford
I think there is a limit to how far you can get without inate ability ... Plenty of ringers have inate ability but don't get opportunity ... lack of inate ability is or will be the thing that limits their progress — Simon Linford
We should aim for deliberate practice and expert performance every time we ring in our local towers. Many tower captains don't understand this. As a consequence we are often too lacksadaisical, and coupled with sometimes lack of inate ability we are left with a mediocre ringing attitude.Deliberate Practice and Expert Performance — Simon Linford
We should aim for deliberate practice and expert performance every time we ring in our local towers. — Phillip George
no 30 - 50 year olds, and older people with limited capability hanging on. — Phillip George
I want the 30- 50 age range.That gives them at least a 30 year ringing career..I'll still teach beginners over that age and many have a valuble contribution to make, not only in ringing but steeple keeping etcState pension age is now 68, yet according to many in the ringing world, anyone over 45-50 is considered to be senile and incapable. it's a ridiculous and insulting attitude and says more about the attitudes of the increasingly elderly ringing "elite" than it does about the abilities of people in that age range. Move on please, the 2000s happened nearly a quarter of a century ago. — John de Overa
I want the 30- 50 age range. — Phillip George
State pension age is now 68, yet according to many in the ringing world, anyone over 45-50 is considered to be senile and incapable. it's a ridiculous and insulting attitude and says more about the attitudes of the even more elderly ringing "elite" than it does about the abilities of people in that age range. Move on please, the 2000s happened nearly a quarter of a century ago. — John de Overa
we have to be realistic about where we are now — John de Overa
one of the strengths of ringing is exactly that span of ages — John de Overa
The would-be ringers are limited by the abilities of those in charge of the tower or responsible for their introduction to ringing — Peter Sotheran
I think part of that requires that the wider ringing community accepts that you don't need to be a Spliced Surprise Major peal ringer to teach people Pain Hun — John de Overa
I find it hard to see how anyone who is not a competent method ringer, at least of basic methods, can hope to teach method ringing — John Harrison
that assumes the teacher is learning somewhere else to stay ahead — John Harrison
Anyone teaching wobbly plain hunt by the numbers is in the wrong book for teaching competent method ringing. — John Harrison
Some might say it’s the district ringing masters role to keep an eye on the overall quality of practices but it’s probably not realistic to expect them to be able to support improvement in all towers that need it. — Lucy Chandhial
Surely teachers need to find out why their learners are failing and try to work out how to help them? — Sue Marsden
no attempt is made to find out WHAT they are finding difficult or WHY they are going wrong. — Sue Marsden
Other times they have not been told HOW to learn a method or even told to learn anything at all - just told to catch hold and are 'talked through' bob minor without any explanation. — Sue Marsden
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