Patrick T > Patrick T's Quotes

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  • #1
    Adam M. Grant
    “The Tennessee experiment contained a startling result. Chetty was able to predict the success that students achieved as adults simply by looking at who taught their kindergarten class. By age 25, students who happened to have had more experienced kindergarten teachers were earning significantly more money than their peers.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #2
    David Graeber
    “We are all communists with our closest friends, and feudal lords when dealing with small children. It is very hard to imagine a society where this would not be true.”
    David Graeber, Debt: The First 5,000 Years

  • #3
    David Graeber
    “Often, the only polite thing to do if one has accomplished something significant is to instead make fun of oneself.”
    David Graeber, Debt: The First 5,000 Years

  • #4
    Adam M. Grant
    “Dalton had built the chess equivalent of an Olympic training center. Each kindergartner took a semester of chess, and every first grader studied the game”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #5
    Adam M. Grant
    “What any person in the world can learn, almost all persons can learn,”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #6
    Adam M. Grant
    “To master a new concept in math, science, or a foreign language, it typically takes seven or eight practice sessions.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #7
    Adam M. Grant
    “What look like differences in natural ability are often differences in opportunity and motivation.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #8
    Adam M. Grant
    “To figure out what students were carrying with them from kindergarten into adulthood, Chetty’s team turned to another possible explanation. In fourth and eighth grade, the students were rated by their teachers on some other qualities. Here’s a sample: Proactive: How often did they take initiative to ask questions, volunteer answers, seek information from books, and engage the teacher to learn outside class? Prosocial: How well did they get along and collaborate with peers? Disciplined: How effectively did they pay attention—and resist the impulse to disrupt the class? Determined: How consistently did they take on challenging problems, do more than the assigned work, and persist in the face of obstacles? When students were taught by more experienced kindergarten teachers, their fourth-grade teachers rated them higher on all four of these attributes. So did their eighth-grade teachers. The capacities to be proactive, prosocial, disciplined, and determined stayed with students longer—and ultimately proved more powerful—than early math and reading skills.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #9
    Adam M. Grant
    “Character is more than just having principles. It’s a learned capacity to live by your principles. Character skills equip a chronic procrastinator to meet a deadline for someone who matters deeply to them, a shy introvert to find the courage to speak out against an injustice, and the class bully to circumvent a fistfight with his teammates before a big game. Those are the skills that great kindergarten teachers nurture—and great coaches cultivate.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #10
    Adam M. Grant
    “When people talk about nurture, they’re typically referring to the ongoing investment that parents and teachers make in developing and supporting children and students. But helping them reach their full potential requires something different. It’s a more focused, more transient form of support that prepares them to direct their own learning and growth. Psychologists call it scaffolding.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #11
    Adam M. Grant
    “Character is often confused with personality, but they’re not the same. Personality is your predisposition—your basic instincts for how to think, feel, and act. Character is your capacity to prioritize your values over your instincts.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #12
    Adam M. Grant
    “If our cognitive skills are what separate us from animals, our character skills are what elevate us above machines. Computers and robots can now build cars, fly planes, fight wars, manage money, represent defendants in court, diagnose cancer, and perform cardiac surgery. As more and more cognitive skills get automated, we’re in the midst of a character revolution. With technological advances placing a premium on interactions and relationships, the skills that make us human are increasingly important to master.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #13
    Adam M. Grant
    “Becoming a creature of discomfort can unlock hidden potential in many different types of learning. Summoning the nerve to face discomfort is a character skill—an especially important form of determination. It takes three kinds of courage: to abandon your tried-and-true methods, to put yourself in the ring before you feel ready, and to make more mistakes than others make attempts. The best way to accelerate growth is to embrace, seek, and amplify discomfort.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #14
    Adam M. Grant
    “you might still have a preferred style of acquiring new knowledge and skills. What we now know is that your preference isn’t fixed, and playing only to your strengths deprives you of the opportunity to improve on your weaknesses. The way you like to learn is what makes you comfortable, but it isn’t necessarily how you learn best. Sometimes you even learn better in the mode that makes you the most uncomfortable, because you have to work harder at it.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #15
    Adam M. Grant
    “Although listening is often more fun, reading improves comprehension and recall. Whereas listening promotes intuitive thinking, reading activates more analytical processing. It’s true in English and Chinese—people display better logical reasoning when the same trivia questions, riddles, and puzzles are written rather than spoken. With print, you naturally slow down at the start of a paragraph to process the core idea and use paragraph breaks and headers to chunk information.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #16
    Adam M. Grant
    “in meta-analyses of dozens of experiments, students and adults were more adept at understanding and speaking a new language over time when they had been taught to produce it rather than only to comprehend it. They also learned better in “flipped classrooms” that challenged them to study vocabulary before class and then practice communicating during class.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #17
    Adam M. Grant
    “Comfort in learning is a paradox. You can’t become truly comfortable with a skill until you’ve practiced it enough to master it. But practicing it before you master it is uncomfortable, so you often avoid it. Accelerating learning requires a second form of courage: being brave enough to use your knowledge as you acquire it.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #18
    Adam M. Grant
    “You don’t have to wait until you’ve acquired an entire library of knowledge to start to communicate. Your mental library expands as you communicate. When I asked Sara Maria what it takes to begin, she said she no longer waits to talk until she has a basic level of proficiency. She starts talking on the first day, discomfort be damned. “I’m always trying to convince people to start speaking,” she tells me. “Just memorize a few sentences—a short monologue introducing yourself and explaining why you’re learning the language.”
    Adam M. Grant, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things

  • #19
    Brandon Sanderson
    “What did you do when there was a guard watching for you? You became the guard.”
    Brandon Sanderson, Wind and Truth

  • #20
    Brandon Sanderson
    “it’s good to ask the questions long before you need the answers.”
    Brandon Sanderson, Wind and Truth

  • #21
    Brandon Sanderson
    “Those who offer blanket condemnation are fools”
    Brandon Sanderson, Wind and Truth

  • #22
    Brandon Sanderson
    “It was the eternal irony of the capable rhetorician: train to find holes in any philosophy”
    Brandon Sanderson, Wind and Truth

  • #23
    Brandon Sanderson
    “Most battles weren’t about killing everyone who stood against you; they were instead about getting your enemy to stop fighting.”
    Brandon Sanderson, Wind and Truth

  • #24
    Brandon Sanderson
    “merely because something is more standard or conventional”
    Brandon Sanderson, Wind and Truth



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