For the purposes of this post, I wanted to quote a bit from Jan Sramek (the co-author's) introduction to the book - in which he discusses his own education. Those with especially good memories might remember the small ripples of controversy caused by his astonishing A-level results: 10 A's.
To Jan:
What was remarkable during those formative years of my life was my parents' ability to create an inspiring environment where outperformance was natural, rather than expected. The pressure was non-existent, replaced by an almost implicit understanding that I would go on to do great things...
...My parents' thinking on parenting and education [were] progressive for the time and place [the Czech Republic]..My chores as a child were very light to non-existent, as was any intervention from either of them into how I spent my free time. This allowed me to spend much of it studying what I wanted to study, rather than what others thought I should study.
The idea of naturalizing a habit of mind resonates very much with comments I've heard from Matthew Taylor about this. There is obviously cross-over with Outliers too on the role of upbringing for future "outperformance" status, even if Jan's 10,000 hours remains in doubt.

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