Deliberate Practice
Purposeful practice creates expertise.
Shrink Definition
Deliberate practice is a structured, purposeful approach to improving performance by repeatedly practicing specific skills just beyond one's current level of ability while receiving meaningful feedback and making continual adjustments. Deliberate practice differs from repetition. It's intentional improvement.
Plain language
Practice only becomes powerful when it's designed to improve something specific.
Shrink Insight
Experience alone doesn't create mastery. Thoughtful refinement does.
Why it matters
Deliberate practice improves: • medicine • athletics • music • leadership • surgery • education • communication High performers consistently practice weak points rather than merely repeating strengths.
Common misunderstanding
More practice doesn't automatically produce better performance. Better practice does.
Shrink Perspective
Experts spend surprisingly little time practicing what they already do well.
Shrink Reflection
What specific skill would improve most if practiced intentionally rather than repeatedly?
Shrink Journal
Choose one ability. Identify the smallest component skill that needs improvement.
Shrink Step
Spend twenty focused minutes improving one narrow skill instead of broadly repeating an entire task.
Shrink Minute
Practice with purpose.
Shrink Takeaway
Mastery grows through intentional refinement.
Medical boundary
This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.
Evidence summary
Deliberate practice, extensively studied by K. Anders Ericsson and colleagues, demonstrates that expertise develops through structured, feedback-rich practice rather than repetition alone. Research across medicine, music, sports, and other domains supports its role in high-level skill acquisition.
Sources
Ericsson (deliberate practice); American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature
Reference status: landmark attributed