Competency-Building Activities
©Arlene R. Taylor PhD
Life usually goes better when you have built some skills in all four cerebral divisions and have some level of competency in each.
Competency tends to increase as you practice specific skills. At least in the field of music, estimates are that it takes about 10,000 hours of practice to develop high levels of competency. Many think that this estimate may apply to other genres as well.
To become outstanding in your field of endeavor, not only does it take thousands of hours of practice, but also the level of competence you achieve may depend on whether or not you are trying to build skills within your brain’s innate energy-advantage or outside of it.
Nothing in this section is to be construed as a recommendation to attempt to achieve outstanding competence in a field of endeavor that does not match your innate brain bent. (Refer to Adapting and to Prolonged Adaptive Stress Syndrome for information about estimates of amounts of time that may be the healthiest for using skills built outside your brain’s innate energy advantage).
Having said that, back to the opening statement: Life usually goes better when you have built some skills in all four cerebral divisions and have some level of competency. If you want to develop skills in a specific cerebral division, following are examples of competency-building activities.
Prioritizing Division | Envisioning Division
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Activities that can help to build skills in the Prioritizing division include:
| Activities that can help to build skills in the Envisioning division include:
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Maintaining Division | Harmonizing Division
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Activities that can help to build skills in the Maintaining division include:
| Activities that can help to build skills in the Harmonizing division include:
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