\xa0
\nAbout the author
\nAngela Duckworth is co-founder and CEO of Character Lab, a nonprofit that use spsychological science to help children thrive. She is also a professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania and in 2013 was named a MacArthur Fellow. Prior to her career in research, she was a math and science teacher in the public schools of New York City, San Francisco, and Philadelphia. Angela shares research-backed advice for parents and teachers in her Thought of the Week.
\nSource: https://angeladuckworth.com/
\nClick here to buy on The Book Depository
\nhttps://www.bookdepository.com/Grit/9781785040207/?a_aid=stephsbookshelf
\nAbout the book
\nIn this instant\xa0New York Times\xa0bestseller, pioneering psychologist Angela Duckworth shows anyone striving to succeed\u2014be it parents, students, educators, athletes, or business people\u2014that the secret to outstanding achievement is not talent but a special blend of passion and persistence she calls \u201cgrit.\u201d
\nWhy 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\u2014a\xa0combination of passion and perseverance for a singularly important\xa0goal\u2014is the hallmark of high achievers in every domain. She\u2019s also found scientific evidence that grit can grow.
\nWinningly personal, insightful, and even life-changing,\xa0Grit\xa0is a book about what goes through your head when you fall down, and how\xa0that\u2014not talent or luck\u2014makes all the difference.
\nSource:\xa0https://angeladuckworth.com/grit-book/
\nLinks
\nFind out how gritty you are here: https://angeladuckworth.com/grit-scale/
Watch Angela\u2019s TED talk here:
https://www.ted.com/talks/angela_lee_duckworth_grit_the_power_of_passion_and_perseverance
Read an excerpt of Grit here:\xa0https://angeladuckworth.com/grit-book-excerpt/
\n\xa0
\nBIG IDEA 1 (6:27) \u2013 Effort counts twice.
\nWithout effort talent is just unmet potential and without effort, skill is what you could have done but didn\u2019t. Effort is the multiplier that opens up your talent, potential and skill. There\u2019s a formula in the book that says skill x effort = achievement.
\nThe effort is grit and grit is a combination of passion and perseverance. Angela talks about the idea that your overall goal (which is the one thing you are gritty about) is fixed but how you get there is fluid.\xa0\xa0
\nHow you get to your goal can be a bit experimental; trying out different things on how to get there. This means that talent is overrated and over romanticised. We often look up to people who we think have innate talents, however a lot of the time it\u2019s actually talent that has been realised through the application of effort and grit.
\nBIG IDEA 2 (8:22) \u2013 Foster interest over passion.
\nA lot of people say \u2018follow your passion\u2019 however not everyone knows what they\u2019re passionate about. And just because you love something doesn\u2019t necessarily mean you\u2019re good at it or that you will be the best in that field.\xa0
\nWhat we need to do is to find what interests us and foster that. Interest is also not found through reflection, it is triggered by interaction with the outside world through discovery \u2013 and this can be messy.\xa0
\nBefore hard work comes into play, you need to find first that thing you will enjoy and will keep you interested. This is how grit is maintained, through curiosity and finding the answers to more questions.\xa0\xa0
\nPassion is not like a firework going off, it\u2019s like a smoldering fire that just keeps burning over time and continues to linger.\xa0 If you are worried that you don\u2019t feel this burning passion inside you, unlike those you follow on Instagram or business people you read about, all of them didn\u2019t have at first either. they just started by getting interested in something and see how that goes.\xa0
\nTo be gritty at something you need to find something you\u2019re interested in which may take several attempts. A lot of people who were successful in their fields, whether its research, science, sports or business, have been through this process.\xa0
\nBIG IDEA 3 (13:17) \u2013 get gritty.
\nDan Chambliss who studies Olympic swimmers said that the real way to become a great swimmer is to join a great team. You need to find a culture of grit where you only have to conform. Being gritty on your own is very hard.\xa0
\nBy joining a gritty team you will start to do what everyone else is doing. This requires communication within the team around how do we maintain grit as a team.\xa0
\nThey found out that grittier people have higher life satisfaction and self-control. Grit requires the ability to be uncomfortable because you have to stick through things that aren\u2019t fun and you may not be making any progress for a period of time. This talks around the idea of being able to resist temptation to relieve yourself of the discomfort.
\nGrit also is about focusing on improving and not just doing things you\u2019re already good at. Deliberate practice is the act of working on things you\u2019re not good at and involves setting a stretch goal, practice, feedback and reflection (and then repeat, over and over and over again\u2026).
\nClick here to buy on The Book Depository
\n\xa0
Support my book habit: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/stephsbookshelf
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.