I came across this article a few days ago and thought it was pretty interesting.
You may have heard about the 10,000 hour rule from the book "Outliers", where it's said that it takes 10,000 hours of effort to become an expert at something. But the 5-hour rule says that it takes 5 hours per week to maintain what you currently know.
Here’s The Simple Math Behind The 5-Hour Rule
Let’s assume that it took you 5,000 hours to master your field. To put this number into context, it takes about 6,400 hours of class time and studying to get a 4-year degree.
After
all of this learning, you’re a happy pumpkin. You feel prepared for
your profession. You’re armed with the latest and greatest skills.
But, here’s the thing…
Every
second that passes by, the knowledge in your head becomes a little bit
outdated, and, therefore a little less valuable. Just like a new car you
buy becomes less valuable the second you drive it off the lot.
But what does that mean in regards to maintaining what you currently know?
In other words, after 10 years, 50% of the facts in the field would be
outdated. This is a realistic number for many of today’s fastest moving
fields.
Ok. So, let’s explore what this mean for those 5,000 hours of learning you did?
Put simply, it means this…
Of course, you wouldn’t learn all of those hours all at once. If you spread out the learning, you’d need to learn 5 hours per week, 50 weeks a year, just to stay up to date.
And that doesn't even take into account this important factor:
We are forgetting what we know. Finally, we have the Forgetting Curve, which shows that we humans forget nearly everything we are exposed to over time without reinforcement.
So, you need to spend 5 hours a week just to stay current with what you know!
No comments:
Post a Comment