Ratings85
Average rating4
It was a decent read. But got really repetitive soon. The main ideas are useful, but I found myself skipping or glancing over a bunch of stuff since it just kept rehashing the same ideas again and again.
Really excellent read. Great examples, anecdotes, and also research-based. One of my favorite books of the year.
As with many books of this ilk, the thesis is more or less in the subtitle. I enjoyed the descriptions of the different seminal studies in psychology as they pertained to the topic, and I like and now often reiterate to myself “We do hard things”: but overall the book got really repetitive after the first chapter or two. Takeway: success is determined more by grit than raw talent. Perhaps as a self-identified gritty individual I was like... well, yeah.
There are parts of this book that really stuck with me, though it fails to address the cost of grit other than to acknowledge that it doesn't address it.
“There's a vast amount of research on what happens when we believe a student is especially talented. We begin to lavish extra attention on them and hold them to higher expectations. We expect them to excel, and that expectation becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.”
I'm not giving this such a high rating because I'm totally sold on the premise or her research. Her theory has been challenged by other studies with equally intriguing findings which suggest that grit is not a trait that can be easily influenced because it's mostly determined by genetics while Duckworth claims that it's something that can be learned and trained. They also suggest there are so many more factors that influence someone's success while she chose to focus on this one specifically. Her book is heavy with anecdotal evidence from successful people from the US, which is a first world country offering privileges some people can only dream of, so you could say her samples are pretty skewed because the people she mentions already have a head start even people that were initially underprivileged simply because they later have access to opportunities which in other places are basically nonexistent.
However, I did find a lot of value in this book, I do feel more inspired and hopeful. It might be a placebo, but at the end of the day, it doesn't matter that much to me. Having grown-up in an environment that placed so much emphasis on natural intelligence and talents, I was taught to always stick to what I'm immediately good at, avoid failure at all costs (because failure is something inherently bad) and other elements of a closed mindset. Based on my experience and that of the people around me, I realized this kind of thinking was detrimental to our development and throughout the years I've learned that people are so much more adaptable and can achieve so much more when they simply try harder and they believe they can make it, which is the opposite of what I've been taught to believe. Ironically, the easiest way to fail is to simply not try because you fear failure.
I don't necessarily think that grit the is main/only reason behind someone's success (what I mean by success is the achievement of one's personal goals whatever these may be, I'm not talking about the standard version of success: money and fame) but I do think it helps a lot. It feels that it should be common sense that applying grit (read as perseverance when odds seem to be against you) can only bring someone a step closer to what to what they want to accomplish. And even if it turns out to be true, that grit is mostly determined by genes, how could it hurt to try improving it, even if just by a little. Life can be unpredictable, messy, unfair but to give up on improving as a person and improving the quality of your life just because you were handed a certain genetic makeup is just adding to the unfairness of it all. I wish I'd learned this earlier.
★ ★ ★ ★ 1/2 (rounded up)
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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...as much as talent counts, effort counts twice.
GRIT
pioneering psychologist Angela Duckworth shows anyone striving to succeed—be it parents, students, educators, athletes, or business people—that the secret to outstanding achievement is not talent but a special blend of passion and persistence she calls “grit.”
Why do some people succeed and others fail? Sharing new insights from her landmark research, Angela explains why talent is hardly a guarantor of success.
Angela has found that grit—a combination of passion and perseverance for a singularly important goal—is the hallmark of high achievers in every domain. She's also found scientific evidence that grit can grow.
Angela gives a first-person account of her research with teachers working in some of the toughest schools, cadets struggling through their first days at West Point, and young finalists in the National Spelling Bee. She also mines fascinating insights from history and shows what can be gleaned from modern experiments in peak performance. Finally, she shares what she's learned from interviewing dozens of high achievers—from JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon to Seattle Seahawks Coach Pete Carroll.
* Not that another narrator would've felt inauthentic...
GRIT
Kudos to author for her effort on this book! Some great stories with clear message “through hard work and persistence, you can become the best version of yourself. “ This book ends up becoming a mere collection of great stories. There are not many methods described for increasing and maintaining our own grit.
I think grit is an important distinction but it would have significantly more utility if the concept were applied to smaller time scales rather than the multi-year time scale implicit in the authors framing of grit. Then it could be practised.
Although I found the evidence Angela Duckworth puts forth in her book compelling and her commentary inspiring, I felt this book could be summed up in a single chapter without losing all that much depth. In summary, Dr. Duckworth asserts that grit is a learned trait which can be augmented throughout one's life through deliberate practice, unwavering perseverance, strategic goal setting, and aligning oneself with people and organizations that exemplify and incentivize gritty behavior.
If you find yourself lacking a defined direction in life or perhaps pursuing TOO many different directions in life, this book will definitely help clarify and realign your priorities. Overall, the book serves as a nice introduction to the concept of grit and puts forth a number of actionable ideas for cultivating grittiness in not only yourself, but also within people you interact with, whether they be your own kids or members of your organization.
Here's some major takeaways:
- Identify your top-level, long-term goals – try out many different things, pursue only those things that truly interest you, and stick with them
- Align yourself with individuals and organizations who will push and inspire you to achieve those goals.
- Engage in regular, deliberate practice, measure your progress, and conciously seek to improve
- Continually push through challenges despite how difficult they may be (certainly easier said than done)
There are a few things in this book I hope to never forget. Then, there are the paradigms that deserve a place on my wall, in their own inks and framed in a way that will preclude my ever living without them. Things my children need to learn that become pillars in our family culture. Thanks, Angela. And great work.
The key message in this book:
It is true that you should do something you love, but the fact is that you will always hit rough patches. Hard work can lead to procrastination and doubt, and that's where grit comes in. With determination and resolve, you can motivate yourself to keep working toward your goals and persevere through the toughest of times.
What we accomplish in the marathon of life depends tremendously on our grit—our passion and perseverance for long-term goals. An obsession with talent distracts us from that simple truth.
On your own, you can cultivate your own grit from the inside out. You can cultivate interests, develop and habit of daily practice and work on a purpose beyond yourself.
You can also grow your grit “from the outside in.” Parents, coaches, teachers, bosses, mentors, friends—developing your personal grit depends critically on other people.
To be gritty is to keep putting one foot in front of the other. To be gritty is to hold fast to an interesting and purposeful goal. To be gritty is to invest, day after week after year, in challenging practice. To be gritty is to fall down seven times, and rise eight.
Four elements of grit
1. Interest. Passion begins with intrinsically enjoying what you do. Remember that interests must be triggered again and again and again. Find ways to make that happen. And have patience. The development of interests takes time.
2. The capacity to practice. One form of perseverance is the daily discipline of trying to do things better than we did yesterday.
3. Purpose. What ripens passion is the conviction that your work matters.
My book notes:
Grit is a valued characteristic in some cultures and successful businesses.
It's not uncommon to see an athlete show grit and determination to overcome a bad start and go on to win the match. But less common is seeing this mindset get promoted on a national scale.
Unless you're in Finland, where exactly these cultural values are widely promoted.
Perhaps due to the long, cold winters and a history of having to defend themselves against their sometimes-hostile Russian neighbors, Finland is a great proponent of grit.
The Finnish have their own word for grit, sisu, which refers to a quality of perseverance that has become integral to Finnish culture.
Finnish psychologist Emilia Lahti takes sisu very seriously and has researched what it means to the Finns. After surveying a thousand Finnish people, she found that 83 percent thought that sisu is a characteristic that is learned and not an innate quality.
And, just as grit can be learned, it can also be instilled as a virtue in a company.
Many credit Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, for instilling a can-do spirit that allowed them to make a $5 billion profit during the 2008 financial crisis, a time when many other banks collapsed.
Dimon learned about grit early on. When his high school calculus teacher had a heart attack, the school had trouble finding a suitable replacement. This led half of the students to drop out of the class. Dimon, however, was part of the other half that soldiered on and taught themselves calculus.
This is the spirit of determination that Dimon has taught his employees in town-hall meetings across the country. He inspires them to stand up and succeed in the face of adversity by providing them with motivation, a sense of purpose and clearly defined goals that can't help but lead them to success.
Teachers and parents can help ensure future success by rewarding hard work more than natural talent.
Unfortunately, children get exposed to all sorts of bad advice, especially when they're told that they'll never be smart enough and that hard work is a waste of time.
This can lead to people never realizing their full potential, so to prevent this from happening it's important to recognize and encourage hard work instead of just rewarding talent.
Rather than crushing someone's hopes, remind children that skill can be achieved through hard work and that grit and determination bring rewards.
Unfortunately, schools routinely reward children for talent rather than hard work, which is something American teachers Mike Feinberg and Dave Levin set out to change.
In 1994, they launched a program called Knowledge is Power, with the rule that children get rewarded for effort and learning rather than natural talent. So, rather than telling a child, “You're a natural, I love that,” teachers would say, “You're a learner, I love that!”
The results were great. The grades of children enrolled in the program rose well above the national average.
The program shows how important it is for adults and teachers to work as role models. Children learn from the example of adults that change and improvement is possible.
Psychologist Daeun Park took a close look at what first- and second-grade children were learning from their teachers.
It turned out that teachers who placed an emphasis on ranking students according to their grades were setting a bad example for the kids. These children would end up thinking that their level of intelligence was predetermined, and ended up preferring safe tasks that didn't challenge them.
The same holds true for parents. Sadly, it's all too common for a parent to think that bad grades reflect a lack of intelligence rather than a lack of effort. This can instill a belief in the child that he's stupid and that he should give up.
If the parents and teachers simply tell children that they need to work harder, they will get motivated and achieve better results.
Finding purpose in your work is a great motivator, but finding your true calling can take time.
There's no getting around the fact that sometimes we have to do things we don't like. And chances are we've all procrastinated and postponed doing a task that seemed like a hassle.
The best way to avoid procrastination is to get motivated by finding the purpose in your work.
Motivation can be easy to find if you're doing something you love. But realizing how your work contributes to the well-being of others can be just as motivating.
Research from 2015 highlights that those who see their work as a calling to help others are often the most content.
And you don't necessarily have to be helping people. Another study surveyed zookeepers and found that many are happy with their comparatively low salary despite their good educations.
These zookeepers identify their work as a calling, and, as a result, their job gives them a greater sense of purpose in life and the belief that they are contributing to making the world a better place. This also means they are more willing to work overtime and stay on duty to tend to sick animals.
If you haven't found your true calling yet, don't worry. It can take time and you might even find it while you're doing something else.
Professor Michael Baime taught internal medicine at Pennsylvania University after struggling through medical school and an internship. He knew medicine wasn't his true calling but he did like being in the position to help people.
Meanwhile, he was developing his real passion: meditation and mindfulness, a practice he'd been in love with ever since he looked up at the sky as a young boy and felt a deep connection with the universe.
Eventually, Baime became the director of internal medicine at a Philadelphia hospital and, in 1992, he formed a meditation class for terminally ill patients.
By sticking with his medical practice he was able to make a place for his true calling. Now, his meditation program is his main occupation.
Be smart about how you practice and avoid getting stuck on autopilot.
If you've spent a lot of time studying for exams, it's likely you know how easy it is to spend an entire day copying down useless information and then ending up with a disappointing score.
The fact is that practicing hard can be a waste of time if you don't practice intelligently.
People who practice always have more success at mastering a new skill than people who put in no effort at all. That said, cognitive psychologist Anders Ericsson has discovered that the key to this success is intelligent practice.
Consider athletics. Successful runners don't practice with vague goals in mind; they are precise and keep a close eye on every detail of their runs, including keeping track of how their body is responding and the distance they're covering.
Their goals are also precise; they attempt to run 100 meters further than last time, to reach a specific speed by the end of the month or to ease the tension in their shoulders during practice.
The benefits of deliberate practice are threefold: it'll get you off autopilot, help you avoid repetition and bring great results.
Doctors also benefit from highly specified training. With this knowledge in mind, Ericsson developed a program to help train doctors to deal with specific critical situations, like cardiac arrests.
The program gives doctors feedback after they suggest certain methods of treatment, providing hints if they end up on the wrong path.
During a training session with the program, one physician remained on autopilot. He wasn't learning from the feedback and he repeatedly made the same mistake. Though diligently practicing and putting in the work, he was simply repeating himself without making any progress.
It wasn't until the doctor was pulled aside and told to take a moment – to think and intelligently reflect about what he was doing – that he got it right and began seeing good results.
It can be easy to simply put your head down, get to work and end up on autopilot with the assumption that you'll inevitably end up reaping the rewards of your practice time. But that won't happen until you stop and reflect on precisely what it is you need to improve and start practicing smart.
It is important to choose work that interests you, but don't let unrealistic expectations get in the way.
Do you ever have trouble getting motivated during your workday? If so, you're not alone. A 2014 Gallup poll revealed that two-thirds of US workers don't feel motivated by their job, with most people finding their job boring. In fact, only 13 percent of workers said they feel engaged with their work.
These statistics highlight a simple fact. No matter how much grit you have, if you want to stay motivated, it's important to do something that interests you.
In 2003, psychologist Mark Allen Morris interviewed hundreds of US employees and the results confirmed that people are at their happiest when their work intersects with their personal interests.
This means that creative-minded people are likely never to fully engage with an administrative desk job. In the same way, someone who enjoys helping and working with others will struggle to find satisfaction in a job that keeps them isolated or stuck working on their own.
With this in mind, it's also important to have realistic expectations about the jobs that are available to you.
Psychologist Barry Schwartz has been counseling students at Pennsylvania's Swarthmore College for 45 years, and he's noticed that today's generation are especially prone to having unrealistic and starry-eyed expectations for what lies ahead.
Schwartz noticed that this impractical outlook has seeped into both their professional and romantic lives. When it comes to jobs and love, he's found that today's young adults are under the impression that there's one unique and perfect match out there waiting for them, and anything else is simply a waste of time.
Today's generation should know that, in reality, there are many jobs and partners out there that could be the basis for a successful relationship or career.
And once you have found that career or partner, don't forget the importance of sticking with it in order to successfully reach your personal and professional goals.
By creating and sticking to low-level goals, you can realize long-term goals and keep your dreams alive.
Conventional wisdom says that we should do what we love. But, more importantly, you need to stay committed to doing what you love. Giving yourself small daily chores is a good way to keep up your levels of effort.
Low-level goals like these can serve as a path to meeting your goals.
Many people will set high-level goals, like becoming a doctor, lawyer, or a professional athlete. Having a life goal like this is inspirational, but it can also lead you into forgetting to set all the small goals you need to accomplish in order to make it happen.
For example, in order to become a doctor, there are a series of low-level goals that should first be set, like studying and passing your pre-med exams. Once this happens, there are more small goals, like getting to your classes on time and making sure you get good grades.
Without incorporating these small goals into your everyday life, the big goal will remain frustratingly out of reach.
However, having a larger dream and vision in place is important for providing meaning and inspiration in your day-to-day life.
After all, sticking to a disciplined regime is a whole lot easier when you have a clear picture of what you're working toward. And it also helps when these passions are straightforward.
Take Tom Seaver, for example. All he ever wanted to do was pitch baseball.
By the time he retired at the age of 42, Seaver had pitched 3,640 strikeouts over a 20 year career as a major league baseball player.
During this career, Seaver orchestrated everything in his life to make sure he kept his goal of pitching alive and well. This meant staying in the shade if he was traveling through a sunny climate since a sunburn on his pitching arm could really interfere with this goal.
This is what being loyal to your goal looks like. Seaver's success was the result of a simple aim.
Effort is twice as valuable as talent, something people with an initial lack of talent often discover.
When Bill Clinton climbed the political ladder all the way to the US presidency, he made it look effortless. For Hillary Clinton, on the other hand, it has never looked easy. But this could actually end up working in her favor.
Effort not only leads to skill; it also leads to results, which makes effort twice as important as talent!
You can look at it like an equation: To determine your level of skill, you take your talent in a given field and multiply it by the amount of effort you put in. So, Talent × Effort = Skill.
But when it comes to getting results, you have to put that skill back into the equation. And, once again, the results are going to depend on the amount of effort you put in. So, this time, Skill × Effort = Achievement.
You can also look at it in terms of athletics. Even if you're naturally talented, you still have to put in the effort to practice and develop your skill. If you want to win Olympic gold, for instance, it's almost completely pure effort that's going to get you there.
The remarkable power of effort is often discovered by people who fight to overcome a lack of talent.
A good example of this is the award-winning writer, John Irving. Far from being a natural talent, Irving struggled in school, getting held back a year, earning a C- in English and receiving below average language scores on his SATs.
But there was a reason for this. It turned out Irving was dyslexic and needed far more time than others to pick up his reading and writing skills.
Irving didn't give up, however. Instead, he put twice the amount of effort into his studies as everyone else, a habit he maintained throughout his life.
Irving ends up writing and rewriting up to ten drafts of his novels, but he knows that his grit and hard work will pay off. The results speak for themselves: his novel The World According to Garp won the National Book Award in 1978.
Even though we like to say that hard work is the key to success, we have a natural-talent bias.
Which quality do you think is more important in a mate: intelligence or good looks? How about in an employee – natural talent or a strong work ethic? In both these scenarios, we tend to deceive ourselves by answering against our natural instincts.
Several nation-wide surveys in the United States have asked the question, Which quality is more important for success: talent or hard work? Around 66 percent of respondents favored hard work, grit and determination. Hard work was the quality they claimed to look for when searching for a prospective employee.
And this opinion doesn't just apply to the business world.
In 2011, psychologist Chia-Jung Tsay posed this question to musical experts, and an overwhelming majority said that practice and hard work is the key to success.
But, if we're being honest with ourselves, what we truly believe is that talent trumps hard work.
In the same 2011 study, the musical experts were played two recordings and told that one was a naturally talented musician, while the other represented years of hard work.
While the experts had said they favored hard work, they overwhelmingly chose the naturally talented musician as being superior. But here's the catch: the experts were played identical piano pieces by the same musician!
This kind of self-deception happens in the business world as well.
Tsay's study also looked at the experiences of entrepreneurs and found that the hard-working ones required several years more experience and at least $40,000 more in start-up capital in order to compete against the naturally gifted.
More often than not, if a candidate is presented as having a natural talent for connecting with people, they'll be considered more valuable than someone who has worked hard to build up a network of colleagues.
Take-Aways
* “Grit,” or diligence in pursuing far-off goals, is the best predictor of success in school and other endeavors.
* A better understanding of grit may strengthen efforts to decrease dropout rates and improve education.
* Talent doesn't make people gritty. In fact, some of the most gifted individuals lack commitment and drive.
* Experts know very little about how to develop or foster grit. This socially important topic deserves further study.
* A concept called the “growth mind-set” may provide clues to building grit. This idea states that learning ability is fluid, not fixed, and can improve with effort.
American discovers that excellence comes from hard work and not just talent. And that passes for revelation now?
It's not a bad book...it's just common sense reiterated. You won't miss much by not reading this.
Lots of information on research surrounding Grit, and what gives people that edge over others. Who has grit, how to get grit, how to build grit, can grit be “built”... very thought-provoking.