Verified Document

Critique Of Malcolm Gladwell's Works Article

Communications -- "How to be a Success" by Malcolm Gladwell "How to Be a Success" is a Maclean's journal article by Malcolm Gladwell stating that expert command of any field requires natural ability, outside help but chiefly unusually hard work for a great deal of hours over an especially long time. Though the successful examples mentioned in Gladwell's article all have talent, they are "outliers" -- exceptional people who all worked very hard on their special fields from their childhoods and spent at least 10,000 hours developing their skills. In fact, their long periods of very hard work over many years seem to be more important than having natural talent because the brain takes that much practice to incorporate all the skills needed to "master" a field. Achieving 10,000 hours of practice requires help, such as approval, encouragement and enough financial support from parents, special programs that make it possible for a child to practice the skill for unusually long periods, and being born early enough in the year to meet requirements for special programs. In sum, Gladwell's article says the formula for success in a specific field is talent, help but most importantly at least 10,000 hours of very hard work in that field.

2. Analysis

Gladwell's article uses several techniques to convince the reader of his argument, including but not limited to the organizational pattern of his article, the support for his argument and his logical appeals. His pattern...

His supports for his argument are the specifics of famously successful lives and studies focused on the effects of various amounts of time devoted to practice. He also makes logical appeals by showing how the figure of 10,000 hours repeatedly appears in famous examples and studies. Though these are not Gladwell's only techniques, these combine for a superficially convincing article.
The article's organization catches the reader's attention by using with famous example of success: Bill Joy, who rewrote UNIX and Java and created much of the software that makes internet access possible (Gladwell, 2008, p. 59); the Beatles, a musical group that is legendary (Gladwell, 2008, p. 60); and Bill Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft (Gladwell, 2008, p. 61). These three "outliers" all had talent, started in their fields in childhood, spent an unusually great deal of time working on their fields, and had rare opportunities to practice for literally thousands of hours. Interspersed in these stories are studies showing that "10,000" seems to be the "magical" number of practice hours that makes a "master" in his/her field (Gladwell, 2008, p. 60). For example, in the middle of Bill Joy's story, Gladwell inserts the study finding that violinists at Berlin's Academy of Music's violinists were divided into "elite" performers who had practiced 10,000 hours, good performers who practiced 8,000 hours and…

Sources used in this document:
Works Cited

Gladwell, M. (2008). How to be a success. Maclean's, 59-61.

Tkacik, M. (2009, November 23). Gladwell for dummies. Retrieved July 6, 2014 from www.thenation.com Web site: http://www.thenation.com/article/gladwell-dummies?page=0,0
Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Related Documents

Blink: An Assessment of Gladwell's Goals for
Words: 533 Length: 2 Document Type: Thesis

Blink: An Assessment of Gladwell's Goals for the Book In the best-selling book, Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking (Gladwell, 2006) author Malcolm Gladwell seeks to accomplish three specific goals or tasks that when taken together change the perception and value of time and effort spent deliberately on decision outcomes. The three aims or goals of the book include first convincing the reader that decisions made very quickly can be

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.

Get Started Now