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Let’s challenge!―自分にとって大切なことがもっと上達する方法(TED)

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ライフハックとしてではなく、英語学習にも極めて有用なのが、著名人が10分程度のプレゼンを行うTEDです。

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エドアルド・ブリセーニョ: 自分にとって大切なことがもっと上達する方法

自分にとって大切なことがもっと上達する方法

一生懸命しているのに、なぜか上達しないことがありませんか?教育者のエドアルド・ブリセーニョは仕事であれ、子育てであれ、創造的な趣味であれ、あなたがすることをもっと良くするシンプルな方法を公開します。彼が提案する効果的な方法にならえば、学習し続け、常に進歩していると感じることができるでしょう(約11分半)。

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学習領域とパフォーマンス領域を見直そう

ひとは、さまざまなことに取り組む時に、そのことに対してベストを尽くそうとします。勉強では良い点を採ることを目指し、家庭では自分の役割を果たし、仕事では結果を出そうとします。かけっこなら、一秒でも早く走ろうとするでしょう。

しかし、始めたばかりの時は成長を感じられたことが、そのうち成果を感じにくくなってきます。一生懸命、努力しているにもかかわらず、です。しかしそれは、あなたのやり方が間違っているのではありません。

一つの物事に集中しすぎていることが、成長を鈍化させている原因なのです。

この問題は、学習領域とパフォーマンス領域という2つの領域を、計画的に切り替えることが出来るようなれば解決します。さらに、この技術を習得した後は人生の困難をも乗り越えていけるようになるでしょう。

学習領域とは

上達することが目的で、そのために計画された行動を行い、まだ習得していない部分に集中すること。

パフォーマンス領域とは

物事を実践していくのが目的で、既に習得したことに集中し、失敗を最小限にしようと可能な限りベストを尽くそうとすること。

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上達しないのは、パフォーマンス領域に大半の時間を費やすから

2つの領域は、どちらも人生において大切な事で、どちらか一方が優れていれば良いものでもありません。

あなたがもし物事の上達を目指すなら、(1)何を目標とし、何に集中し、何を望むかを明確にする。(2)どちらの領域も同等に力を入れて学ぶ。これらのことをしていきましょう。そうすれば、あなたのパフォーマンスはもっと良くなり、より上達することができるはずです。

私たちの多くが、一生懸命やってもそんなに上達しないのは、パフォーマンス領域に大半の時間を費やしてしまっているからです。問題の解き方を覚えたあとに、応用問題を繰り返し勉強しすぎているのです。

エドアルド・ブリセーニョは、「これが成長を妨げて、皮肉にも長期的にパフォーマンスを伸び悩ませている」と言います。

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パフォーマンス領域と同じくらい学習領域にも時間を費やそう

エドアルド・ブリセーニョは一例として、古代ギリシアの政治的指導者であり、最も優れた雄弁家で法律家のデモステネスをあげています。彼は法律や哲学など勉学に励み(パフォーマンス領域)、さらに、法律家には説得力も必要と気が付いていたので、優れたスピーチや 所作についても勉強しました(学習領域)。

具体的にデモステネスは、学習領域の向上のために以下の3つのことを行っています。

  1. 体の変な癖を取り除くため、鏡の前でスピーチの練習を行う
  2. 滑舌が悪くても、より明瞭に話せるように口に石を入れた状態でスピーチをする
  3. 当時の裁判所はとてもうるさかったので、海に行って波にかき消されない大きな声を出す

デモステネスはこれによって、パフォーマンスの精度を上げて、これまで以上の成果を出せるようになりました。

私達がより上達したい場合、熟練したコーチ(メンター)による指導を受けることが望ましいでしょう。なぜなら、優れた教師やコーチは行動の目的を把握しており、専門的なフィードバックをあなたに与えることが出来るからです。

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結論:リスクをおかす場所、失敗できる環境をつくることが上達の秘訣

専門職として働き出したあと、最初の数年間を過ぎるとパフォーマンスは伸び悩みます。しかし、学習領域に時間を費やし続ける人は常に上達し続けることが出来ると、エドアルド・ブリセーニョは言います。

覚えたことをただ繰り返して試行錯誤するのではなく、別の新しいことに取り組み、優秀なメンターからフィードバックを与えてもらうことがそれにあたります。

しかし、誤解しないでいただきたいのは、パフォーマンス領域に価値がないといっているわけではありません。どちらも成長するために大切な要素なのです。ただ、どちらかに偏っていれば成長が鈍化してしまうということです。

新しいことばかり身につけても、それを実践していかなければ身につきません。学んだことを繰り返し行うなかで、次第に精度は上がっていきます。両輪をうまく動かしていくことが、成長への道しるべなのです。

エドアルド・ブリセーニョは、学習領域により多くの時間を割くために、以下の4つを持つことを勧めています。

  1. 成長思考を持つ(上達できることを信じて受け入れる)
  2. 大切な目標をつくる(途中で挫折しないための決意)
  3. アイデア(必要性)を考える(いかに上達するのか、そのために何ができるのか)
  4. リスクが低い状況で練習を行う

特に、エドアルド・ブリセーニョは失敗出来る環境づくりが大切だと、4の必要性を強調しています。準備運動なしにオリンピックに出る選手はいません。テスト勉強をせずに試験に臨む生徒もいないでしょう。

私達は、トライアンドエラーを繰り返していくうちに、だんだんと自信を持つことが出来ます。しかし、いまの世の中は失敗を避けようとする傾向が強くあります。それでは、挑戦もしにくくなってしまい、成長が鈍るのは当然のことです。

最初から大きな挑戦をすることはありません。小さな挑戦で試行錯誤を繰り返して、だんだんと大きな挑戦が出来るようになれば良いのです。そのために、まず小さな挑戦を行える場所づくりをすること最重要事項なのです。

学校でも、職場でも、ローリスクをおかせる場所があり、そこに適切な指導者がいて、さらに自分でも目的意識を持ち向上心を抱き続けていれば、あなたはずっと成長し続けることが出来るでしょう。

英語全文

Most of us go through life trying to do our best at whatever we do, whether it’s our job, family, school or anything else.

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I feel that way. I try my best. But some time ago, I came to a realization that I wasn’t getting much better at the things I cared most about, whether it was being a husband or a friend or a professional or teammate, and I wasn’t improving much at those things even though I was spending a lot of time working hard at them. I’ve since realized from conversations I’ve had and from research that this stagnation, despite hard work, turns out to be pretty common.

So I’d like to share with you some insights into why that is and what we can all do about it. What I’ve learned is that the most effective people and teams in any domain do something we can all emulate. They go through life deliberately alternating between two zones: the learning zone and the performance zone.

The learning zone is when our goal is to improve. Then we do activities designed for improvement, concentrating on what we haven’t mastered yet, which means we have to expect to make mistakes, knowing that we will learn from them. That is very different from what we do when we’re in our performance zone, which is when our goal is to do something as best as we can, to execute. Then we concentrate on what we have already mastered and we try to minimize mistakes.

Both of these zones should be part of our lives, but being clear about when we want to be in each of them, with what goal, focus and expectations, helps us better perform and better improve. The performance zone maximizes our immediate performance, while the learning zone maximizes our growth and our future performance. The reason many of us don’t improve much despite our hard work is that we tend to spend almost all of our time in the performance zone. This hinders our growth, and ironically, over the long term, also our performance.

So what does the learning zone look like? Take Demosthenes, a political leader and the greatest orator and lawyer in ancient Greece. To become great, he didn’t spend all his time just being an orator or a lawyer, which would be his performance zone. But instead, he did activities designed for improvement. Of course, he studied a lot. He studied law and philosophy with guidance from mentors, but he also realized that being a lawyer involved persuading other people, so he also studied great speeches and acting. To get rid of an odd habit he had of involuntarily lifting his shoulder, he practiced his speeches in front of a mirror, and he suspended a sword from the ceiling so that if he raised his shoulder, it would hurt.

To speak more clearly despite a lisp, he went through his speeches with stones in his mouth. He built an underground room where he could practice without interruptions and not disturb other people. And since courts at the time were very noisy, he also practiced by the ocean, projecting his voice above the roar of the waves.

His activities in the learning zone were very different from his activities in court, his performance zone. In the learning zone, he did what Dr. Anders Ericsson calls deliberate practice. This involves breaking down abilities into component skills, being clear about what subskill we’re working to improve, like keeping our shoulders down, giving full concentration to a high level of challenge outside our comfort zone, just beyond what we can currently do, using frequent feedback with repetition and adjustments, and ideally engaging the guidance of a skilled coach, because activities designed for improvement are domain-specific, and great teachers and coaches know what those activities are and can also give us expert feedback. It is this type of practice in the learning zone which leads to substantial improvement, not just time on task performing. For example, research shows that after the first couple of years working in a profession, performance usually plateaus. This has been shown to be true in teaching, general medicine, nursing and other fields, and it happens because once we think we have become good enough, adequate, then we stop spending time in the learning zone. We focus all our time on just doing our job, performing, which turns out not to be a great way to improve. But the people who continue to spend time in the learning zone do continue to always improve. The best salespeople at least once a week do activities with the goal of improvement. They read to extend their knowledge, consult with colleagues or domain experts, try out new strategies, solicit feedback and reflect. The best chess players spend a lot of time not playing games of chess, which would be their performance zone, but trying to predict the moves grand masters made and analyzing them. Each of us has probably spent many, many, many hours typing on a computer without getting faster, but if we spent 10 to 20 minutes each day fully concentrating on typing 10 to 20 percent faster than our current reliable speed, we would get faster, especially if we also identified what mistakes we’re making and practiced typing those words. That’s deliberate practice.

In what other parts of our lives, perhaps that we care more about, are we working hard but not improving much because we’re always in the performance zone? Now, this is not to say that the performance zone has no value. It very much does. When I needed a knee surgery, I didn’t tell the surgeon, “Poke around in there and focus on what you don’t know.”

“We’ll learn from your mistakes!” I looked for a surgeon who I felt would do a good job, and I wanted her to do a good job. Being in the performance zone allows us to get things done as best as we can. It can also be motivating, and it provides us with information to identify what to focus on next when we go back to the learning zone. So the way to high performance is to alternate between the learning zone and the performance zone, purposefully building our skills in the learning zone, then applying those skills in the performance zone.

When Beyonce is on tour, during the concert, she’s in her performance zone, but every night when she gets back to the hotel room, she goes right back into her learning zone. She watches a video of the show that just ended. She identifies opportunities for improvement, for herself, her dancers and her camera staff. And the next morning, everyone receives pages of notes with what to adjust, which they then work on during the day before the next performance. It’s a spiral to ever-increasing capabilities, but we need to know when we seek to learn, and when we seek to perform, and while we want to spend time doing both, the more time we spend in the learning zone, the more we’ll improve.

So how can we spend more time in the learning zone? First, we must believe and understand that we can improve, what we call a growth mindset. Second, we must want to improve at that particular skill. There has to be a purpose we care about, because it takes time and effort. Third, we must have an idea about how to improve, what we can do to improve, not how I used to practice the guitar as a teenager, performing songs over and over again, but doing deliberate practice. And fourth, we must be in a low-stakes situation, because if mistakes are to be expected, then the consequence of making them must not be catastrophic, or even very significant. A tightrope walker doesn’t practice new tricks without a net underneath, and an athlete wouldn’t set out to first try a new move during a championship match.

One reason that in our lives we spend so much time in the performance zone is that our environments often are, unnecessarily, high stakes. We create social risks for one another, even in schools which are supposed to be all about learning, and I’m not talking about standardized tests. I mean that every minute of every day, many students in elementary schools through colleges feel that if they make a mistake, others will think less of them. No wonder they’re always stressed out and not taking the risks necessary for learning. But they learn that mistakes are undesirable inadvertently when teachers or parents are eager to hear just correct answers and reject mistakes rather than welcome and examine them to learn from them, or when we look for narrow responses rather than encourage more exploratory thinking that we can all learn from. When all homework or student work has a number or a letter on it, and counts towards a final grade, rather than being used for practice, mistakes, feedback and revision, we send the message that school is a performance zone.

The same is true in our workplaces. In the companies I consult with, I often see flawless execution cultures which leaders foster to encourage great work. But that leads employees to stay within what they know and not try new things, so companies struggle to innovate and improve, and they fall behind.

We can create more spaces for growth by starting conversations with one another about when we want to be in each zone. What do we want to get better at and how? And when do we want to execute and minimize mistakes? That way, we gain clarity about what success is, when, and how to best support one another.

But what if we find ourselves in a chronic high-stakes setting and we feel we can’t start those conversations yet? Then here are three things that we can still do as individuals. First, we can create low-stakes islands in an otherwise high-stakes sea. These are spaces where mistakes have little consequence. For example, we might find a mentor or a trusted colleague with whom we can exchange ideas or have vulnerable conversations or even role-play. Or we can ask for feedback-oriented meetings as projects progress. Or we can set aside time to read or watch videos or take online courses. Those are just some examples. Second, we can execute and perform as we’re expected, but then reflect on what we could do better next time, like Beyonce does, and we can observe and emulate experts. The observation, reflection and adjustment is a learning zone. And finally, we can lead and lower the stakes for others by sharing what we want to get better at, by asking questions about what we don’t know, by soliciting feedback and by sharing our mistakes and what we’ve learned from them, so that others can feel safe to do the same.

Real confidence is about modeling ongoing learning. What if, instead of spending our lives doing, doing, doing, performing, performing, performing, we spent more time exploring, asking, listening, experimenting, reflecting, striving and becoming? What if we each always had something we were working to improve? What if we created more low-stakes islands and waters? And what if we got clear, within ourselves and with our teammates, about when we seek to learn and when we seek to perform, so that our efforts can become more consequential, our improvement never-ending and our best even better?

Thank you.

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TEDまとめ(1):エキスパートたちが贈る極上のメッセージ ライフハックとしてではなく、英語学習にも極めて有用なのが、著名人が10分程度のプレゼンを行うTEDです。 TED Talksと...