Malcolm Gladwell Explains Why Human Potential Is Being Squandered

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crossroadstimes

crossroadstimes

12 жыл бұрын

Highlights from a PopTech Talk by Sociologist Malcolm Gladwell, author of "Outliers: The Story of Success."
"When we observe differences in how individuals succeed in the world our initial thought is always to say, to argue that that is the result of some kind of innate difference in ability.
And when we look at the different rates that groups succeed we think that that reflects some underlying innate trait in the characteristics of that group. And that is wrong... what capitalization rates say... is there's another explanation and that has to do with poverty, with stupidity, and with culture."
"We have a scarcity of achievement... not because we have a scarcity of talent. We have a scarcity of achievement because we're squandering our talent. And that's not bad news that's good news; because it says that this scarcity is not something we have to live with. It's something we can do something about."
Watch full talk at PopTech [19 min.]:
poptech.org/popcasts/malcolm_g...

Пікірлер: 249
@noturdaddyblameyomomma8354
@noturdaddyblameyomomma8354 2 жыл бұрын
The reason I decided to coach my son's baseball team is, in part, for the reasons Malcolm mentioned with regards to development. I realized nearly all coaches prioritize the better players (which are usually the older kids) & neglect the other players. No development whatsoever. They also prioritize "winning" over development. Yo would think these people (the coaches) will figure out they're losing all the time because kids are not being developed, but to no one's surprise, they actually blame the the children that don't play well & their parents for letting them join team. Dad to the rescue 💪🏼
@dragonhold4
@dragonhold4 4 жыл бұрын
_Poverty, Stupidity, and Culture are what stunt capitalization (not ability)_ -Malcolm Gladwell
@ja7857
@ja7857 9 жыл бұрын
What I like most about Malcolm Gladwell is how he uses facts to back up his point of view. He's got facts equipped like arrows on his back, shooting one after another; all falling into place to make a solid case.
@bastianoo2484
@bastianoo2484 4 жыл бұрын
@My Thoughts Smart man
@aaronwalterryse4281
@aaronwalterryse4281 4 жыл бұрын
@My Thoughts Hunh?
@christhescienceguy6285
@christhescienceguy6285 3 жыл бұрын
I think this talk helped me explain a lot of things on why so much STEM talent could get wasted in the world and in America.
@zagi1212
@zagi1212 10 жыл бұрын
I listened to audio version of his book "Outliers: The Story of Success." I highly recommend it! amazing book!
@nikhilgoyal007
@nikhilgoyal007 4 жыл бұрын
thanks !!!
@denzelwashington6222
@denzelwashington6222 2 жыл бұрын
Malcolm is stupid, he blames the environment, if a person wants to do something, poverty cant stop anypne! Hes talking general, not all people thinks like that! Mslcolm is a victim, snd victimhood is contrast to success!
@fredrika27
@fredrika27 2 жыл бұрын
@@denzelwashington6222 Tell that to the forefathers of former slaves, Native Americans and Hispanics whose businesses, homes and lands that they worked hard for to get were taken from them by force or in many cases burned down. Try pulling yourself up by the bootstraps on land that is unproductive, not having an education or being able to get a loan. In the US society has squandered the potential of its people by taking away their choices and forcing them into ghettos and prisons. Yet, the people themselves are to blame for this? Now, these same people along with Asians who are considered poor like Laotians, Cambodians and Vietnamese are demanding their rights. I get tired of hearing that POC are lazy especially Blacks, Hispanics and Native Americans when everyone knows these groups understand what it is to work. Even those with a side hustle have a hustle to the side hustle! So yes, we've wasted our potential so certain sections of our society can enjoy the good life! We could have had the Black and Brown communities out of poverty a long time ago, but as Dr. Gladwell says, "That wasn't a priority!" Now, we're paying a price for all this foolishness because the POC who have succeeded aren't the outliers rather they are proof of how people can succeed when they are properly invested in.
@denzelwashington6222
@denzelwashington6222 2 жыл бұрын
@@fredrika27 too much DRAMA, yout fate is in your hands, not on Malcoms blame book 😂😂😂
@babin6
@babin6 11 жыл бұрын
The internets greatest contribution is as a social forum without boundaries. It lets an anti-social society socialize, and yes although 99% of people end up arguing over the cutest cat videos of the week, the comments on Malcolm Gladwell videos that inspire thought make it all worth it.
@davelavish8580
@davelavish8580 6 жыл бұрын
Malcom you are my favorite social psychologist sir, keep on doing your thing and change the way people think.
@Brad-il9mw
@Brad-il9mw 2 жыл бұрын
Isn't he a journalist?
@victorhugovaladezcabrera2555
@victorhugovaladezcabrera2555 6 жыл бұрын
I love all these teachings, thanks my dear God.
@sugarpump
@sugarpump 6 жыл бұрын
Oh wow, what a wonderful TED talk! I sure enjoyed and learned so much. I'ld like a part II outlining how to move beyond these figures.
@Renae55681
@Renae55681 11 жыл бұрын
I can tell you that drive and passion are factors and you cannot achieve without them. I know a lot of people with tremendous drive and passion but don't get very far. Its about who you know more than anything. Passion helps you succeed once you get there. Knowing someone gets you the opportunity to prove yourself.
@axelasdf
@axelasdf 10 жыл бұрын
Beneficiary of the relative age effect here: My aunt was an educator that told my parents not to enroll me into school until they had to. I was a year more mature and experienced than I would have been if I had been enrolled at the "early" opportunity. I still encourage this.
@MrMeeHigh1
@MrMeeHigh1 3 жыл бұрын
I also noticed this very early in life. I was put in school age 6 with some kids age 8+. They got consistently better grades, teachers were consistently congratulating them and setting them as standard and insulting us for being less. Every morning waking up deprived of sleep, hungry because of lack of time, school was not a place to learn. I already knew how to read before school so I wasted so many years of my life there. I hate schools and stupid people that organize the education. I hope their children pay for their misdoings. I advise everybody to NOT destroy their children with schools. They can read and learn so many things from the internet. Not to mention the old and useless information they teach in schools. Organized education is so hopelessly outdated like the postal services or the rest of the state funded money pits.
@gloriaf6971
@gloriaf6971 Жыл бұрын
I agree. Being older works to your advantage in elementary school. I was the only child born to my parents at the beginning of the year. I did a lot better in school than my siblings, who were born in later months in the year.
@JoeSkutnik
@JoeSkutnik 10 жыл бұрын
Such a genius. Love this
@davelavish8580
@davelavish8580 6 жыл бұрын
JoeSkutnik me too
@dianewiegel7136
@dianewiegel7136 5 жыл бұрын
Good talk, we need to do better at empowering children and adults of any background to achieve.
@sheildufine
@sheildufine 11 жыл бұрын
Inspiring as always Malcolm
@somerando7191
@somerando7191 11 жыл бұрын
I've worked for a few companies, none of them have ever checked my credit. A friend of mine works for a staffing agency, they don't check credit either. It is actually in a companies interest to hire indebted employees. They *need* this job.
@TheDavidlloydjones
@TheDavidlloydjones 4 жыл бұрын
The cuts are sometimes a little sharp, but the benefit of the editing is huge. Thank you, whoever it is who started to barely function.
@kickass12339
@kickass12339 5 жыл бұрын
What an amazing speech!
@fsl4faisal
@fsl4faisal 8 жыл бұрын
Thank you #MalcolmGladwell
@Chigirl26
@Chigirl26 11 жыл бұрын
Makes sense! Awesome! If you just listen to his message its hard to argue with!
@davelavish8580
@davelavish8580 6 жыл бұрын
Poverty is the #1 thing that limits human potential. We need to make are biggest focus as a nation trying to get people out of poverty.
@chrono106
@chrono106 4 жыл бұрын
Looks like lacking an ethos of hard work is the number one thing that limits potential, since the Asians are coming over here and becoming high income earners in one generation.
@lemostjoyousrenegade
@lemostjoyousrenegade 4 жыл бұрын
Truth well stated.
@casperr1299
@casperr1299 3 жыл бұрын
@@chrono106 nah the only reach out for them is becoming a savage or eaten alive, where ass some have schools others violence. It’s a different world, the schools are poor in those areas it’s not even seen as viable for many. My point was we all fight in different in ways based on where we believe we can be the most dangerous opponent or opening to a way out
@chris_tzikas
@chris_tzikas Жыл бұрын
that's so funny
@JamesShoemark
@JamesShoemark 11 жыл бұрын
Go Malcolm - Absolute Genius!
@gigas81
@gigas81 11 жыл бұрын
I've read interviews from professionals (college graduate that went into a high reward job with high risk) and read a quote saying "As good as people believe I am, there were people in my neighborhood better than I am at my job." Its crazy because imagine if those people had a chance or desired to work at a professional level? How far could we as a human race be? Gladwell is right about the "stupidity" part. Selfishness, cronism, pride, etc. all need to disappear for progress to happen.
@helencoltart3483
@helencoltart3483 4 жыл бұрын
gigas81 - end replace with opportunity, compassion and mentoring along with recognition of all types of talents. Your on to something!
@enochbrown8178
@enochbrown8178 4 жыл бұрын
Wonderful lecture. I agree with everything he says with one caveat: I roomed with a fellow midshipman at the U.S. Naval Academy in the early 1970's by the name of Thomas Reilly. He was - by all accounts, including my own - a brilliant student. He majored in aeronautical engineering and received top grades in his chosen major. Also, most of us studied a hell of a lot more than he did just to tread water and get by. He did not and often took weekends off. So, there is a lot to be said about innate talent and how it propels one above the crowd. There was also another student at the Academy by the name of Rocky Raher who was even more brilliant than Reilly, who once took the final exam for differential equations (and aced it) after studying a total of 4 nights. So, does talent matter? Well, what do you think?
@MatterChannel
@MatterChannel 4 жыл бұрын
Talent definitely DOES matter but what he is talking about (or at least to my understanding) is more from a community aspect. He is saying that as a community (human, country, group, etc) we are not setting people up for success. Of course there are the people who are talented but if we do not do the leg work to set them up to express that talent we will have squandered their potential and life.
@mr_knowitall
@mr_knowitall 4 жыл бұрын
But the question remains, what was their preparation like before you knew them? Just like with Gladwell's hockey example, might those two students have had a superior academic upbringing that by the time you knew them they were simply just ahead of the curve?
@enochbrown8178
@enochbrown8178 4 жыл бұрын
@@mr_knowitall I don't think so. No matter how "ahead of the curve" you are, no normal human being can teach himself differential equations in 4 nights. These guys had "it."
@beaumartin7373
@beaumartin7373 4 жыл бұрын
This is anecdotal evidence, rather than assuming that what you experienced applies to all situations, we should try and collect data to understand the truth.
@Kohox
@Kohox 4 жыл бұрын
@@enochbrown8178 I think your story has very narrow ways of defining having "it". I've met geniuses with data who could not handle strategic thinking, or management. "Each is great in his own place, the duty of one is not the duty of the other". Capitalization matters far more than "innate talent", but innate talent matters as well. The problem is capitalizing on it in ways that complements the individual. If you compare all of us to Reilly's ability to master differential equations then we'll all look like comparable apes but you'll also be making poor strategic judgements on how to utilize people given your chosen lens.
@Psychentist
@Psychentist 11 жыл бұрын
(Last page of rant, I promise) Compounding the issue further is the fact that most employers now run credit checks on all job candidates. So if you had a car accident, were hospitalized due to illness or injury, or incurred debt for any reason, your chances of getting a job fall to almost zero. Now tell me how a person is supposed to repair their credit, or their jobless situation, if no one will hire the indebted or the unemployed? The system is designed to put you down and keep you there.
@gladwellj96
@gladwellj96 11 жыл бұрын
Thanks
@AndrewWeiler
@AndrewWeiler 11 жыл бұрын
Pretty compelling arguments, however he sticks here to the societal or external factors, which of course have a certain validity about them. There are however also internal factors one needs to consider, which he doesn't here, such as passion and drive. These are two commonly recognised precursors to success which can be beaten out kids, or encouraged in them...to put it bluntly so the point is made. There are things we and schools do that do not kindle the flames, but rather douse them!
@annarboriter
@annarboriter 11 жыл бұрын
I think he ignores the vested interests of members of the ruling class to perpetuate their own success through their offspring, meaning that being born to wealthy parents increases one's chances for success regardless of persistence of talents. As for his example of the rates of potential achieved among Chinese immigrants, the overriding factor is not that they are Chinese i.e cultural determinism, but that they are cohort that collectively emigrated as part of an effort towards achievement.
@rith5
@rith5 11 жыл бұрын
I agree with Malcolm, fits my experience. But I'd like to see some more evidence.
@CanadaYo
@CanadaYo 5 жыл бұрын
Neal Degrasse Tyson is an astrophysicist because he was given the means and he created his own potential that's a great example of capitalising on human potential.
@nealkriesterer
@nealkriesterer 10 жыл бұрын
Does anybody know why there are so many cuts in this talk? It seems like they are cutting out all the five second gaps between sentences
@QuaaludeCharlie
@QuaaludeCharlie 4 жыл бұрын
I like how he uses the fraze in a Given , Tells me He's into Statistics :) QC
@arkoraa
@arkoraa 11 жыл бұрын
I think he is suggesting that the Canadian hockey league should change their method of selection so that kids who are born in the first half of the year compete in a separate pool from the kids who are born in the second half of the year. The resources spent will be about the same, and it will eliminate the unfair competitive advantage that older kids have. However, I don't think it will ever happen, unfortunately
@brucelee7702
@brucelee7702 10 жыл бұрын
"hard work" is long hours that lead to nothing. "Successful work" is organized long hours that lead to an aimed goal.
@venkatbabu186
@venkatbabu186 4 жыл бұрын
Educational loan from government Bank or subsidiary is the cheapest. Almost 50% interest rates on other loans whether external or world Bank.
@l.rongardner2150
@l.rongardner2150 2 жыл бұрын
" I saw the best minds of my generation rot." - Alan Ginsberg
@iampetergriffin
@iampetergriffin 12 жыл бұрын
Judging from his audiobooks I didn't know he was Black. On the topic, his presentation was fantastic. I wish he would have elaborated on HOW we can do something about it!
@bolivar1789
@bolivar1789 7 жыл бұрын
Wonderfully explained, as always! I highly recommend everyone to listen to Malcolm's excellent podcast " Revisionist History". It is truly addictive:-) Thanks a lot for the upload.
@justgivemethetruth
@justgivemethetruth 11 жыл бұрын
Gladwell seems to be moving in a very specific direction with his writing and the conclusions that he is getting to. I think most of the effort of our country is specifically to reduce human capitalization, we do it on purpose to promote status quo stability - I'd hypothesize anyway. I don't recall him writing much about this in Outliers though.
@rakune7252
@rakune7252 4 жыл бұрын
justgivemethetruth what country? Why does this always have to come back to countries? Are you American?
@Hahapizza420
@Hahapizza420 4 жыл бұрын
Poor diet, lack of exercise, addiction, no meditation practice
@bertwesler1181
@bertwesler1181 4 жыл бұрын
Why is it that people don't know the difference between the word why and how. No matter what you say we still won't know why.
@stevedavenport1202
@stevedavenport1202 3 жыл бұрын
All things being equal, I think a person with an IQ of 120 will do better than a person of 100. If the 120 person works as hard as the 100 person, he/she will do better.
@DrSwapnilBhanushali
@DrSwapnilBhanushali 4 жыл бұрын
Factual, logical and analytical
@yoda3988
@yoda3988 4 жыл бұрын
Dude is awesome
@vanillagorilla3813
@vanillagorilla3813 4 жыл бұрын
No wonder I didn’t make the NBA; I was born late November.
@wokeupina
@wokeupina 4 жыл бұрын
Nice mustache
@zacharyneilson9220
@zacharyneilson9220 4 жыл бұрын
Being born late November would make you one of the oldest kids in your class. Great for Basketball. You likely weren’t tall enough or didn’t practice hard enough.
@vanillagorilla3813
@vanillagorilla3813 4 жыл бұрын
Zachary Neilson it was a joke, ya turd. But thanks for your completely unsolicited judgment and unfounded assumption on my work ethic.
@zacharyneilson9220
@zacharyneilson9220 4 жыл бұрын
Vanilla Gorilla my bad
@kingpaid995
@kingpaid995 4 жыл бұрын
Zachary Neilson height isn’t everything in basketball. It’s mostly practice and the way you use the natural things that you can’t control to your advantage. Look at Isaiah Thomas. He was a top 3 point guard for the Celtics until he got injured. And he was about 5,9
@SongSwan
@SongSwan 11 жыл бұрын
You get out of life what you put into it,is life fair,no but there is such a thing as odds and anyone can improve theirs by hard work,most attempts to make life fair are born out of envy of success and bitterness over failure and fail miserably.
@KeroroGunsouTX
@KeroroGunsouTX 11 жыл бұрын
So, what is the solution to the under capitalization of talent? Do we just make our kids try harder to stick with and solve problems?
@Renae55681
@Renae55681 11 жыл бұрын
People are the greatest resource. When you learn to capitalize on the talent you have an not look to outside source you solve your resource problem. When you learn to harvest the intellectual capital you have then your resource problem will be solved. Our resource problem is a byproduct of poor utilization of the talent we have.
@armanjindal9666
@armanjindal9666 10 жыл бұрын
Read the Outliers if you like this talk...
@Narayanwaraich
@Narayanwaraich 11 жыл бұрын
Whoa! A peaceful argument, it can't be!
@MusicbyWordPlay
@MusicbyWordPlay 3 жыл бұрын
lol
@DJXLDJKEF
@DJXLDJKEF 12 жыл бұрын
The reason the clapping sounds the way it does has to do with how sensitive the decibels are picked up by the microphone being recorded with.
@iampetergriffin
@iampetergriffin 12 жыл бұрын
Oh, I agree, the internet seems to be nothing more than exchanges of insults and lame attempts to outwit everyone these days. You're most welcome. :) It's quite an interesting phenomena in regards to how people behave if there are no consequences/accountability.
@isaiahheaden
@isaiahheaden 11 жыл бұрын
Pretty awesome argument. We can do better.
@homerco213
@homerco213 12 жыл бұрын
So far I agree with, or am amazed by, everything Gladwell says. The only other person I'd put in that same company is Chomsky.
@KitagumaIgen
@KitagumaIgen 11 жыл бұрын
But that was exactly Gladwells argument? That the reason was _cultural_, not racial, cultural in the sense of effort towards achievement (not temples and shrines). Agree comletely with the vested interest to protect their success of the upper class. For the development of society lack of capitalisation is a significant waste.
@MrBel23
@MrBel23 11 жыл бұрын
I wish you would be interested in helping me express to the people what the comprehensive solution to the economic system is. I may have worked very hard to understand the whole thing myself alone, but getting up to explain it to others I find daunting. You have made an interesting point here, which is already has a resolve within my solution.
@unixnut
@unixnut Ай бұрын
This is actually Malcolm Gladwell unlike what the thumbnail says.
@jadenramalho4642
@jadenramalho4642 11 жыл бұрын
i wonder what he said on all the edited-out parts
@aaronwalterryse4281
@aaronwalterryse4281 4 жыл бұрын
you can nprobably find the entire Ted Talk if not on youtube then on TedTalks own site
@trmcpgale
@trmcpgale 10 жыл бұрын
You just defined hard work.....
@codacreator6162
@codacreator6162 4 жыл бұрын
With a viable, measurable, and ROI that makes it WORTH it. In the absence of return on investment of effort, kids WILL give up. We do a really bad job of recognizing and rewarding effort. When a kid with two college degrees and great grades can't get a job that will support his family, WTF is the point? We don't give up because we're lazy. We give up because our efforts go unrecognized. Take the best teachers in America, for instance. What is their motivation to BE the best when Society seems to be convinced they're worthless and that anybody with a heartbeat can do the job. Ultimately, it's about income potential and the lack of value we put on labor in this country. You don't have these outcomes in more equitable countries.
@chrono106
@chrono106 4 жыл бұрын
coda creator Doesn’t seem to fit what Gladwell is saying. He said the most important constraint on a person’s capitalization was how much you valued hard work. That test of the unsolvable math problem didn’t have any discernable ROI but the Asian kids were still working on it for the whole time limit. When that ethos of hard work was compounded over 30 years, it resulted in high levels of professional success. Seems like success is a function of being willing to work hard without necessarily being guaranteed a clear reward.
@th3lunchb0x
@th3lunchb0x 12 жыл бұрын
Matt Keetley was born literally one day after me. lol.
@MrBkw1122
@MrBkw1122 10 жыл бұрын
Why is Gladwell not President?! OH! I get it- He has a brain, is logical, and bases his decisions on scientific fact and is all things that go against our current model. What a shame that we will never reach civility without leaders who won't think like this! Thank you Malcolm for your amazing contributions to the falling of the eye scales and upholding the amazing idea of common sense- YOU SIR! ARE A HERO!
@JezelJordan
@JezelJordan 8 жыл бұрын
Possibly because he was born in England and raised in Canada. He would make a great Prime Minister though!
@Psychentist
@Psychentist 11 жыл бұрын
Well, another thing to consider is the example of Ted Talks. EVERY TIME they have one about the wealth gap, class warfare, employment rates, corruption, etc, that talk gets banned. So in a discussion like this, it's actually better NOT to mention that, because most people who are willing to listen to such a discussion already factor that in without it being mentioned. It's the elephant in the room that no one will mention because if they do, they aren't allowed to speak.
@nekroneko
@nekroneko 10 жыл бұрын
I was born at the back end of the school year (late July) and knew of this effect years ago. I have a relatively decent IQ of roughly 135, but I have never been able to translate that into something I've been proud of. I also come from a low income background so I've been hit with many disadvantages. I've never had my EQ tested but I would guess it would be low. I guess what I'm trying to say is that I do understand fully how much life can be destroyed without the correct help.
@edgewaterz
@edgewaterz 8 жыл бұрын
Great talk but choppy editing. I wish they just posted the entire lecture.
@justgivemethetruth
@justgivemethetruth 11 жыл бұрын
I don't think you need to go through the waste and bother of creating a parallel hockey season, you just have to have younger groups of hockey players segregated by size, in perhaps different leagues, maybe by some formula inputting weight and height.
@teodorlaci
@teodorlaci 4 жыл бұрын
I see the birthdates of the playes but they are not at all born in the first half of the year. You have players being born in January, April, June, August, September and December. How is that being born in the first half of the year ??? Can someone elucidate it to me ?
@MrTStat
@MrTStat 4 жыл бұрын
5 out of 25 only meaning 80% of the players were born in the first half of the year of course this is one year only when add data from 10 year and average them you would get a more accurate percentage
@jiankuo
@jiankuo 4 жыл бұрын
The main reason for why Chinese kids do better in school. Since feudal society, the government has national tests that give different levels of positions in the government, that is a life changer the person and family. The long term effect of this has created a very strong need to educate kids, from family to school environment. On the other hand, US families don’t have that tradition, good test results don’t mean the same, kids in the US see more sucessuful athletes and artists.
@gabydewilde
@gabydewilde 10 жыл бұрын
It is very hard not to mistake his examples for the topic. I think the core mistake is very simple. Our idea of education is to have little kids sit still and shut up for the duration of their entire childhood. Education is important but it isn't *that* important. An interest in a topic is all the potential we need. If one doesn't get to see any of the world before age 26 one cant be interested in it either. The scope is just to narrow to cover all bases.
@KeroroGunsouTX
@KeroroGunsouTX 11 жыл бұрын
What exactly is the more complicated explanation for the under-capitalization of talent in America? And the thing about the idea of 10,000 hours of practice is that he didn't come up with it, so if you have a problem with the idea, blame the people who originally came up with it.
@iampetergriffin
@iampetergriffin 12 жыл бұрын
I never mentioned him being a Black speaker, or one who focuses on the Black movement. I just commented on his ethnicity. Albeit, I do see the misunderstanding, and agree that beyond my surprise it is irrelevant. No worries, mate!
@McMurchie
@McMurchie 11 жыл бұрын
Great talk really interesting but i really didn't like the editing, it jumped from one frame to another in the worst possible way, i thought i was having a stroke :P
@iampetergriffin
@iampetergriffin 12 жыл бұрын
That's interesting. My mother is German and Polish, and although I am the same skin tone as Gladwell I haven't been referred as anything other than Black my entire life. Please don't take that negatively as it isn't the intention. I just find it fascinating that you're not accepted in society until you meet some sort of arbitrary requisites.
@swesleyc7
@swesleyc7 11 жыл бұрын
Does his shirt not fit?
@zammmerjammer
@zammmerjammer 11 жыл бұрын
It's exactly equal -- 25% from each quarter? And the differences between players born in the 1980s and those born in the 1900s has no influence on their hockey training and subsequent abilities that? If not, I think this rather proves his point than refutes it -- there is nothing intrinsic about one's birth month that dictates hockey ability. Speaking of leaping to unfounded conclusions... p.s. "moot"
@josephd2653
@josephd2653 10 жыл бұрын
Don't completely discount IQ. The relative intelligence of a person, while not being the only important factor, can easily be a large benefactor or deficit for learning. Also, not all smart students are the same. Just because you have a high IQ, and person B has an equally high IQ, this does not mean that you prepare the same (or even similarly for that matter). It also doesn't denote being proficient in the same fields either.
@Phaze252
@Phaze252 11 жыл бұрын
He was providing an alternative explanation for why (so little) people succeed, the one he was providing was contesting scarcity of talent in America. So he didn't show any evidence for it.
@davelavish8580
@davelavish8580 6 жыл бұрын
We need to stop thinking of things in terms of race, we are all mixed race so we should all stop identifing ourselves as black, white, brown, red, or yellow.
@BlaBla-fn8zb
@BlaBla-fn8zb 4 жыл бұрын
Dave Lavish dude this is not the place to start this argument. He is simply explaining an observation
@iwanabana
@iwanabana 11 жыл бұрын
alright. into half of the lecture, the only question in my mind is what is a cap rate?
@TheMasteratLink
@TheMasteratLink 11 жыл бұрын
Oh, I remember why I said it now. Obviously, he doesn't think you have to go to high school to achieve something, to think otherwise you would have to be crazy. If people had to explain out everything they said completely as if nobody had common sense, nothing would get done.
@johnhenrybussey
@johnhenrybussey 11 жыл бұрын
wait you don't think that how much pressure we get from our parents and our communities stems from culture?
@Renae55681
@Renae55681 11 жыл бұрын
Missed the point of the talk this is a myopic view. He used hockey to illustrate a point. Talent is being squandered in America. I agree 100%. There is so much that stifles possibility of achievement and he named a few of those things. Nepotism is another. It real is sad. Then we wonder why we do so poorly on national and global achievement levels.
@willhelmberkly3025
@willhelmberkly3025 4 жыл бұрын
Yep. Any and all disparities between groups of people could be ameliorated if we all just adopted had a can do attitude. I have a dream that one day any 4'11 85 lbs Vietnamese man will have the same opportunity to play in the NBA as the son of Lebron James.
@DSSlocksmiths
@DSSlocksmiths 10 жыл бұрын
I was the youngest in my year at school until the age of 14. I more than held my own in what subjects I was interested in. Go forth and find a local Maker or Hackspace. Realise your potential by creating what you thing the world needs for yourself. And if there isn't one, start one!
@justgivemethetruth
@justgivemethetruth 11 жыл бұрын
That's a good point, but it just balances Gladwell's really, because you misstate Gladwells opinion as not wanting to develop more people, and that is the key to the future, when we have more people and exponential benefit from all those people when they are better connected to each other and the information. The government has become fearful about this progress because it governs for an elite, and that is the problem.
@redryan20000
@redryan20000 12 жыл бұрын
there's hundreds.
@obviouslylee
@obviouslylee 11 жыл бұрын
After I read your comment I thought I had misinterpreted his presentation. I watched again, ending with the same conclusion. I think your comment is exactly the point he was trying to make. He just didn't have the time to fully explore it. Saying that poverty is a cap, is the same as saying what you said about the wealthy, it's just another factor of the same argument, same with the Chinese. He didn't say the exact words, but in an extended presentation, your comment would fit his premise.
@Ray89135
@Ray89135 4 жыл бұрын
I agree with Gladwell that cap rates vary, but I don't agree when he dismisses the fact that different groups have different inherent abilities (on average). That means all groups of people have the same average inherent abilities in the same areas. If that were the case then there would be a lot more blacks with Nobel prizes in math or sciences or a lot more Asians playing in the NFL or NBA. Gladwell, like all successful writers/speakers, are constrained to stay within the boundaries of political correctness.
@stephenbarnes7388
@stephenbarnes7388 4 жыл бұрын
I understand what you saying but I wonder how much more the blacks in America would acheive if they were not spending the first half of the 1900s fighting racism and the prior 200 - 300 years being oppressed in slavery and wasnt allowed an education.
@Ray89135
@Ray89135 4 жыл бұрын
@@stephenbarnes7388 Mr Barnes, for sure, you have a valid point and I deplore unfairness in this world. I've also been the victim of prejudice on many occasions. I only meant that Gladwell should take care not to mislead people to the wrong conclusion with his topic of "cap rates".
@kevklatman
@kevklatman 4 жыл бұрын
i hate capitalization.
@dontvoteforanybody3715
@dontvoteforanybody3715 4 жыл бұрын
The ability to delay gratification, to concentrate on a problem, to benefit from practice - these are all partly genetic and partly cultural, just as intelligence itself is.
@whatblank4157
@whatblank4157 7 жыл бұрын
why was this recommended? is youtube trying to tell me i'm stupid or something?
@Alex_Plante
@Alex_Plante 11 жыл бұрын
Except that Malcolm Gladwell isn't African-American. He's Jamaican Marroon-British-Canadian, although he's been living in the US for the past 30 years now.
@lubc8953
@lubc8953 10 жыл бұрын
"... we have a scarcity of achievement because we are squandering our talent." And so, "Scarcity is not something we have to live with, it's something we can do something about."
@lubc8953
@lubc8953 10 жыл бұрын
Poverty inhibits capitalization of human potential, relative age effect for hockey players (6 n/a) institutional stupidity, Chinese-americans 2 those w/ave comparable to white-americans high, and professionals 70% v. 60% because they work harder per Flynn.
@DeoMachina
@DeoMachina 12 жыл бұрын
That applause at the end is creepy as hell
@aaronwalterryse4281
@aaronwalterryse4281 4 жыл бұрын
Was that even applause or just static? Kind of sounded like paper rustling to me.
@dinosaurdude5668
@dinosaurdude5668 4 жыл бұрын
Thinking on a deeper level, US needs to do this more as a collective whole. Let’s all strive to get better!
@shroommyboom4511
@shroommyboom4511 2 жыл бұрын
I would rebuttal about the age theory effect conclusion is not placing enough emphasis on the importance of "size" in athletics. Especially physical sports like hockey. There is a reason they choose the biggest, and it has to do with the advantages size plays in the sport of hockey and in male sports in general when it comes to strength and speed. Where in some sports, size can be a hinderance like gymnastics. Then I would further go on to say that the players in the "second half" hockey league would be the "big players" of the next year's all star list. So its a rolling talent of "big kids." The "second half" kids are kids that would be the "biggest" if they would eventually have become big, in the next year's child hockey draft. Love Gladwell, but the hockey study is poo. Also - to note, if there were infinite hockey trainers than the most efficient way to develop talent would be every day tryouts with new rotations of trainers. Also if child labor laws were not in effect, working children harder could also benefit "grooming" a more productive talent pool. But that is not sustainable nor probable, or humanely empathetic, nor economically efficient due to the law of diminishing returns. So you need to find a good equilibrium - where is that? Not sure. But I would beg to question that 2 major tryout sessions a year for hockey in children under 12 is excessive. Final Edit: American culture is taught to question authority. Chinese culture is not. American culture is to forge your own path and innovate. Chinese is to be a good COG in a brilliant and powerful system. American children dont stop because they dont work hard, they have been taught to ask "why" which probably creates a set of . Where as Chinese culture is efficiency, completion, and status dictate success. This sounds like being an American "homer" but I am just making the contrast of the starkness in the "hero" of culture differences.
@Kunjaku
@Kunjaku 10 жыл бұрын
Good talk but it's not particularly honest to refer to Gladwell as a sociologist.
@JosephDillman
@JosephDillman 11 жыл бұрын
capitalization rates are low... get it?
@sjuvanet
@sjuvanet 4 жыл бұрын
six years later and it finally came to me. i get it!
@celineswift7296
@celineswift7296 4 жыл бұрын
I don't 😂😂😂 can u explain?
@DanielMOFO
@DanielMOFO 10 жыл бұрын
Capable kids in USA don't go to college, because the tuition fees are extremely high. Not because they are just poor.
@pumpupthevolume4775
@pumpupthevolume4775 5 жыл бұрын
That's a bunch of crap. College education is free to those who can't afford it in the US.
@DaCatOnTop
@DaCatOnTop 11 жыл бұрын
Regardless of the ethnic/racial/national background of the immigrants, they all have a hard work ethic and focus on education and succeeding as opposed to the native born Americans. By lumping the white immigrants with the native born Americans you are presenting a distorted picture of the performance of 'white Americans' as a whole. I would like to know what exactly is meant or represented by the notion of the 'white American' .
@ognqski
@ognqski 3 жыл бұрын
The problem with Gladwell is that he makes sense, and yet he does not really address many fundamental predictors of success such as character, morals, habits, virtues, and values. Academics such as Gladwell like to blame everything on poverty, and that is probably the right reason in some cases and countries. In America poverty has its source in so many cases in divorce, alcohol, inability to hold down a job, teen pregnancy, destructive habits, etc. All those are based on poor character, morals, habits, and values. College professors don't like to recognize this as it would imply that the person has to be religious (notice I did not say spiritual) and has to have a relationship with God. Gladwell types would rather the government be in charge and bet that at the end of the day fighting poverty, changing the rules, somehow intervening to be the great equalizer will make things right,......yet it does not. Individuals, families, communities and even societies will not get better until there is repentance, and a turning away from evilness, a true humbleness and asking God for His favor, His grace. They just do not want to hear this at all, so much easier to blame poverty; America is the perfect example that poverty is rooted on basic character, morals, habits, virtues, and values and those are given (freely I may add) by God to those who are humble and look for his grace. Not an answer the largely secular academia will accept at all. This is why we are where we are as a society, we do it our way, we get our results. Let's try God's way with God's grace, this is at the end of the day what made America successful and a blessing to the world. We are losing this at an alarming speed.
@ognqski
@ognqski 2 жыл бұрын
@@hamc9477 Who ever told you religious people were perfect? Rather than a debate let me point out for you that really smart and academic folks came up with communism, socialism, and marxism and those certainly were godless ideologies by design....they beat hitler by a country mile in terms of people killed (not counting the huge damage they have done to human kind in all aspects) some books put the total killed between 100 and 150 million of their own people. So give me imperfect religious people trying to get close to God and hoping for His Grace and Mercy. You can keep fact cherry pickers like really smart people who only know how to screw things up, and in most cases have never ever had a real job.....cause they are "too smart" I suppose.
@ognqski
@ognqski 2 жыл бұрын
@@hamc9477 go ask gladwell academic types how to think….they have done a tremendous job thus far fixing everything cause they are “smart”…….
@neilchomos
@neilchomos 11 жыл бұрын
Interesting the Malcolm chooses the Medicine Hat Tigers as his choice as an example of his theory. If you want to waste an hour of time, as I did, go to the Hockey News top 100 hockey players of all time. You will find that the birthdays of these 100 athletes is equally spread throughout the year. NHL hockey players are so good at younger years that they are playing an age group above themselves making their month of birth mute.
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