A while back, I did a survey here asking how people improve their writing. I also surveyed other subs, and after getting around 1,000 responses, the recommended improvement strategies fell into seven main categories:
Write, read, get feedback, study, edit, enjoy art, and live.
They're pretty obvious categories, but the research I've done on the topic of expertise science suggests they're not enough. Simply doing a thing over and over again, after establishing basic competence at it, won't make you better at that thing (source: "Peak" by Anders Ericsson and Robert Pool). What *is* proven to work is something called deliberate practice (I talk about how DP applies to writing in my youtube series here, if you're interested: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...).
What do you guys think of the seven categories? Do you apply them all, on a consistent basis, in your own writing practice?
Write, read, get feedback, study, edit, enjoy art, and live.
They're pretty obvious categories, but the research I've done on the topic of expertise science suggests they're not enough. Simply doing a thing over and over again, after establishing basic competence at it, won't make you better at that thing (source: "Peak" by Anders Ericsson and Robert Pool). What *is* proven to work is something called deliberate practice (I talk about how DP applies to writing in my youtube series here, if you're interested: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...).
What do you guys think of the seven categories? Do you apply them all, on a consistent basis, in your own writing practice?