This will have Contributing articles from different people, there's nothing like embracing diversity.
If you are interested in sharing or writing something for the blog, you are most welcome to do so.
I am a believer in reading(though I can barely count the number of books I've read in my life,haha) Ironical right? Well, that is going to change.
In this section you'll find monthly book reviews on exceptional pieces out there, some pretty good reads which are worth taking a look at.
I'll also talk about exciting stuff and events happening in Kenya and internationally.
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Love it or hate it? My take on "Outliers- The story of Success"
BOOK REVIEW
Gladwell
Malcolm's book "Outliers- The story of Success", is one of my FAVOURITE
books for many reasons. I once went for an interview with the Managing
Director of a top Kenyan insurance firm, and during the interview he
asked me "Do we work because we love what we do or we are forced to
because of circumstances/ commitments?"After I gave him my answer he
asked me "Have you read the book Outliers?" To which I shamefully
replied I hadn't; I wasn't much of a reader then.
Well,
I made a mental note to myself to read it. And months later I got a
hold of it, and read. I loved it, every bit of it. It isn't one of those
books written to give you the answers you are looking for. Far from it.
Infact after reading it, it leaves you with more questions than you
had. I believe that is the true mark of a good book. It gets you
thinking, almost pushes you to think outside the box, question what you
previously thought; it DOES NOT OFFER a solution, but makes YOU look for
one instead.
Who or what are outliers?
out-li-er \ - , l ï(-9)r\ noun
1. Something that falls outside the main body or group that it is a part of
2. Someone who stands apart from others of his or her group
Why
do some people succeed far more than others?" In Outliers Malcolm
Gladwell argues that the true story of success is very different, and
that if we want to understand how some people thrive, we should spend
more time looking around them — at such things as their family, their
birthplace, or even their birth date. The story of success is more
complex — and a lot more interesting — than it initially appears.
Intelligence and ambition count, but they arent the only factors.
The lives of outliers — those people whose achievements fall outside normal experience — follow a peculiar and unexpected logic.
Malcolm introduces you to one kind of outlier after another: to geniuses, business tycoons, rock
stars,
and software programmers. He attempts to uncover the secrets of a
remarkable lawyer, look at what separates the very best pilots from
pilots who have crashed planes, and try to figure out why Asians are so
good at math. He argues that there is something profoundly wrong with
the way we make sense of success.
What is the question
we always ask about the successful? We want to know what they're
like—what kind of personalities they have, or how intelligent they are,
or what kind of lifestyles they have, or what special talents they might
have been born with. And we assume that it is those personal qualities
that explain how that individual reached the top.
It's
not enough to ask what successful people are like, in other words.
Malcolm argues that it is only by asking where they are from that we can
unravel the logic behind who succeeds and who doesn't.
Malcolm speaks in detail about some topics which I found SUPER interesting, I'll pose them as questions so you think about them:
1. The Matthew Effect
Is
Success the result of what sociologists like to call "accumulative
advantage."? Is it those who are successful who are most likely to be
given the kinds of special opportunities that lead to further success?
Does this begin to create a gap between them and others, and does this
gap only keep growing? Think about it.
2. The 10,000 Hour rule
Is
there such a thing as innate talent? Yes? no? It seems that the closer
psychologists look at the careers of the gifted,the smaller the role
innate talent seems to play and the bigger the role preparation seems to
play. Do you agree?
3. The trouble with Geniuses
Does The relationship between success and IQ work only up to a point?
If
intelligence matters only up to a point, then past that point, other
things—things that have nothing to do with intelligence—must start to
matter more?
4. The Ethnic Theory of Plane crashes
Are
Planes safer when the least experienced pilot is flying, because it
means the second pilot isn't going to be afraid to speak up if things go
wrong? Seems not to make so much sense right?
5. Rice paddies and Math tests
"No one who can rise before dawn three hundred sixty days a year fails to make his family rich"
When it comes to math, do Asians have a built-in advantage?
This,
if you ask me, is a brilliant book. Even if you aren't much of a reader
or thinker, this book is FOR YOU. You might love it or hate it, but its
worth a read.
Let me know your thoughts.
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