. Do you think practice makes perfect output? Why?
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. Do you think practice makes perfect output? Why?
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Answer:
In cooking? Yes, because practicing how to cook the dish will help us achieve the right taste and overall quality of the food. We would know what is best and what is not for the dish.
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Answer:
'Yes' and here's why... Practice is doing something over and over again to embed it into our unconscious repertoire of skills. ... If we continually do the same thing and accept the outcome we get without desiring any better outcome, then practice simply makes permanent that which we are practicing.
Perfect practice, or maybe a better name for it would be quality practice, involves an extra component. It involves the concept of a gap between the outcome we get when we do the activity, and the outcome we want from the activity. In order for practice to make perfect, there is an implication of change in the action being practiced to zero in on the perfect way to do the action. There is an implication of feedback from each repetition that in some way guides changes to the next repetition so that it is closer to what the person practicing considers the perfect way to do it.
Explanation:
So practice only makes ‘perfect’ when there is recognition, and ideally conscious reflection, of the desired outcome and how that differs from the achieved outcome.
When you are asking people to learn a skill, how can you ensure they get clarity about their desired outcomes, clarity about their achieved outcome, and take the time to reflect between repetitions?