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Wednesday, October 21, 2015

How to be an expert in 15 minutes a day according to a genius

Books on Bookshelf - Ready Set Read


I was talking with somebody about this quote and I couldn't cite the reference off the top of my head.
"Einstein said that if a person studies a subject for just 15 minutes a day in a year he will be an expert, and in five years he may be a national expert."
But it was Einstein....Albert Einstein!!! I wish I knew that, it would have given me more credibility. But there you go, the value of reading, writing and -- I would add -- arithmetic.

Some of the stats below really give you a good look at why we are where we are in this country, but there I go again complaining about stuff. FASCINATING!!

http://annkroeker.com/2008/11/22/just-fifteen-minutes-a-day-readysetread/


Jennifer at Scraps and Snippets posted about Lifelong Learning at her blog, citing a 2006 article by Harvey Mackay packed with statistics to make an autodidact sprint to her bookcase and grab anything within reach:
  • Only 14 percent of adults with a grade-school education read literature in 2002.
  • 51 percent of the American population never reads a book more than 400 pages after they complete their formal education.
  • 73 percent of all books in libraries are never checked out.
  • The average American watches 32 hours of TV every week.
  • The average American reads only eight hours (books, newspapers, magazines, Yellow Pages, etc.) every week.
  • The average American annually spends 10 times more on what he puts on his head than what he puts into his head.
Consider the following:
  • If you read just one book per month for 12 straight months, you will be in the top 25 percentile of all intellectuals in the world!
  • If you read five books on one subject, you are one of the world’s foremost leading authorities on that subject!
  • If you read just 15 minutes a day — every day, for one year — you can complete 20 books!
The idea of becoming an expert by focusing one’s reading on a single subject reminds me of a post I wrote about lifelong learning and Five Fat Files. In it, I referenced an online article on brain research that included a statement attributed to Albert Einstein:
Einstein said that if a person studies a subject for just 15 minutes a day in a year he will be an expert, and in five years he may be a national expert.
Literary agent Terry Whalin used those same statistics from the Mackay article to encourage writers to read regularly.
With these statistics, it is little wonder that parts of the publishing business are struggling (and even predicting the struggle will continue for some.)If you want to be involved in some aspect of publishing (books or magazine writing where your work appears in print), then you need to be committed to reading on a regular basis. It’s important to take in great information through reading. The experience will fill your mind and heart with something important which will influence your writing. Create a habit of reading.

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