• If you haven't done so already, please add a location to your profile. This helps when people are trying to assist you, suggest resources, etc. Thanks (Click the "X" to the top right of this message to disable it)

Get the best from your practice - science.

Status
Not open for further replies.

Soulsaver

Been here for ages!
Site Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2013
Messages
4,335
Reaction score
10
Found this -

http://www.creativitypost.com/psychology/8_things_top_practicers_do_differently

Just in case it goes away:

Synopsis

Weve all heard the phrase practice smarter, not harder, but what does that really mean? What does smarter practice actually look like? A study of collegiate piano majors suggests that the key lies in how we handle mistakes.


Its true that some degree of time and repetition is necessary to develop and hone our skills, of course. But we also know on some intuitive level that to maximize gains, we ought to practice “smarter, not harder.”

But what does that really mean anyway? What exactly do top practicers do differently?

Research: Pianists, learning Shostakovich

A group of researchers led by Robert Duke of The University of Texas at Austin conducted a study several years ago to see if they could tease out the specific practice behaviours that distinguish the best players and most effective learners.

Seventeen piano and piano pedagogy majors agreed to learn a 3-measure passage from Shostakovichs Piano Concerto No. 1. The passage had some tricky elements, making it too difficult to sight read well, but not so challenging that it couldn’t be learned in a single practice session.

The setup

The students were given two minutes to warm up, and then provided with the 3-measure excerpt, a metronome, and a pencil.

Participants were allowed to practice as long as they wanted, and were free to leave whenever they felt they were finished. Practice time varied quite a bit, ranging from 8 1/2 minutes to just under 57 minutes.

To ensure that the next day’s test would be fair, they were specifically told that they may NOT practice this passage, even from memory, in the next 24 hours.

24 hours later…

When participants returned the following day for their test, they were given 2 minutes to warm up, and then asked to perform the complete 3-measure passage in its entirety, 15 times without stopping (but with pauses between attempts, of course).

Each of the pianists’ performances were then evaluated on two levels. Getting the right notes with the right rhythm was the primary criteria, but the researchers also ranked each of the pianists’ performances from best to worst, based on tone, character, and expressiveness.

That led to a few interesting findings:
Practicing longer didn’t lead to higher rankings.
Getting in more repetitions had no impact on their ranking either.
The number of times they played it correctly in practice also had no bearing on their ranking. (wait, what?!)

What did matter was:
How many times they played it incorrectly. The more times they played it incorrectly, the worse their ranking tended to be.
The percentage of correct practice trials did seem to matter. The greater the proportion of correct trials in their practice session, the higher their ranking tended to be.

The top 8 strategies

Three pianists’ performances stood out from the rest, and were described as having “more consistently even tone, greater rhythmic precision, greater musical character (purposeful dynamic and rhythmic inflection), and a more fluid execution.”

Upon taking a closer look at the practice session videos, the researchers identified 8 distinct practice strategies that were common to the top pianists, but occurred less frequently in the practice sessions of the others:


1. Playing was hands-together early in practice.

2. Practice was with inflection early on; the initial conceptualization of the music was with inflection.

3. Practice was thoughtful, as evidenced by silent pauses while looking at the music, singing/humming, making notes on the page, or expressing verbal “ah-ha”s.

4. Errors were preempted by stopping in anticipation of mistakes.

5. Errors were addressed immediately when they appeared.

6. The precise location and source of each error was identified accurately, rehearsed, and corrected.

7. Tempo of individual performance trials was varied systematically; logically understandable changes in tempo occurred between trials (e.g. slowed things down to get tricky sections correct).

8. Target passages were repeated until the error was corrected and the passage was stabilized, as evidenced by the error’s absence in subsequent trials.

The top 3 strategies

Of the eight strategies above, there were three that were used by all three top pianists, but rarely utilized by the others. In fact, only two other pianists (ranked #4 and #6) used more than one:


6. The precise location and source of each error was identified accurately, rehearsed, and corrected.

7. Tempo of individual performance trials was varied systematically; logically understandable changes in tempo occurred between trials (e.g. slowed things down to get tricky sections correct; or speeded things up to test themselves, but not too much).

8. Target passages were repeated until the error was corrected and the passage was stabilized, as evidenced by the error’s absence in subsequent trials.

What’s the common thread that ties these together?

The researchers note that the most striking difference between the top three pianists and the rest, was how they handled mistakes. It’s not that the top pianists made fewer mistakes in the beginning and simply had an easier time learning the passage.

The top pianists made mistakes too, but they managed to correct their errors in such a way that helped them avoid making the same mistakes over and over, leading to a higher proportion of correct trials overall.

And one to rule them all

The top performers utilized a variety of error-correction methods, such as playing with one hand alone, or playing just part of the excerpt, but there was one strategy that seemed to be the most impactful.

Strategically slowing things down.

After making a mistake, the top performers would play the passage again, but slow down or hesitate – without stopping – right before the place where they made a mistake the previous time.

This seemed to allow them to play the challenging section more accurately, and presumably coordinate the correct motor movements at a tempo they could handle, rather than continuing to make mistakes and failing to identify the precise nature of the mistake, the underlying technical problem, and what they ought to do differently in the next trial.

The one-sentence summary

Success does not consist in never making mistakes but in never making the same one a second time. -George Bernard Shaw
- See more at: http://www.creativitypost.com/psychology/8_things_top_practicers_do_differently#sthash.ioRRCfEi.dpuf
 
That's fascinating Soulsaver, many thanks.

I think I must have read that a long time ago and "consciously forgotten" it, but I've recently been trying to apply a good few of those principles, so it's very interesting to see them set out and "validated."
Tom
 
Thanks Tom
I also found someone had distilled this down to a single sheet - to print and put on your studio wall:
Practice
1. Play hands-together early in practice.

2. Conceptualise the music.

3. Practice should be thoughtful; pause while looking at the music, sing/hum, make notes on the page.

4. Errors………………..
……..Preempt by stopping in anticipation of mistakes.
………Address immediately when they appear.
………Identify precise location and source of each error and then rehearse and correct.

5. Slow things down to get tricky sections correct– without stopping –

**Practicing longer doesn’t necessarily lead to better playing; getting more correct repetitions is key**
What does matter was how many times you play it incorrectly.
Success does not consist in never making mistakes but in never making the same one a second time." -George Bernard Shaw – I.E. Don’t practice mistakes
"The slower you go the faster you'll get there.."
 
There's plenty to go on, not irrefutable.. and I'll add my teach would argue you shouldn't slow down at the tricky piece - you should take out & slow the whole section down, even the bits you can play well. Then get it up to speed before building it back in to the full piece. Theory being you shouldn't build a slow piece into the normal piece, as it will detract from the correct recalled tempo in your mind.
Either way you can probably easily see what's suits you.
 
Yes, ultimately slowing down for the tricky bits is no good of course, but the advice given is sometimes along the lines of "play the whole piece at a speed at which you can play the tricky parts" and this can just lead to wasting time playing large parts too slowly, then tripping up anyway at the hard bit!

I think another thing to beware is relying on probability! There's a hard bit, so you slow it down, and work on it, until you mostly get it right..... Doing that just leaves a random element in your playing. Suppose gives the hard bit some extra attention until it's right 5 times out of 6. You could say that if there are four such hard bits in the music, you have a less than 50% chance of playing it right!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top