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    Malcolm Timothy Gladwell‚ (born September 3‚ 1963) is a Canadian journalist‚ bestselling author‚ and speaker. He has been a staff writer for The New Yorker since 1996. He has written five books‚ The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference (2000)‚ Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking (2005)‚ Outliers: The Story of Success (2008)‚ What the Dog Saw: And Other Adventures (2009)‚ a collection of his journalism‚ and David and Goliath: Underdogs‚ Misfits‚ and the Art of Battling

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    they are most likely to be the ones to belong in the elite team in the future. Despite of the fact that birth date is an important factor‚ an individual’s own skill is really the key to reach the top. In the second chapter‚ The 10‚000-Hour Rule‚ Gladwell presented that to become truly a master of something‚ an individual must undergo 10‚000 hours of practice and mastery on a particular skill which is like doing 20 hours of work a week for 10 years. He cites examples like K. Anders Ericsson’s study

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    According to Gladwell‚ most people are incapable of becoming successful; Gladwell says this is because of the radically simple fact that some do not get the same chances and opportunities as others. It has more to do with a person’s fate than their intelligence in his or her field. The general idea of a population is that if a person puts enough time and hard work into something then there is no end to the possibilities to come. The global belief‚ with the exception of Malcolm Gladwell and his followers

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    Summarization of “Why the Revolution Will Not Be Tweeted” Malcolm Gladwell wrote the article “Why the Revolution Will Not Be Tweeted” to inform the world about networks such as Twitter or Facebook and their uses. Gladwell starts off by explaining how networks worked before these websites were created. He talks about how civil rights movements circulated through the country in a short period of time without the use of social networking. Then Gladwell explains the facts of why these social networks will

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    has the word “glad” in his name‚ Malcolm Gladwell did not manifest an inkling of gladness in his article. I felt more of a disgruntlement towards the U.S. healthcare crisis as a whole. General medical coverage‚ accessible in the greater part of the Western world‚ is not accessible in the U.S. on account of the wrongly named‚ "moral hazard". Main Claim: Gladwell’s arguments are send the message that a trip to the doctor is not to do so at one’s liberty. Gladwell provides evidence of a bureaucratic

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    Most people will make thousands of decisions in just one day‚ while some are important‚ others can impact someone’s life very much. In the book Blink‚ by Malcolm Galdwell‚ it tries to teach the readers that decisions that are made in two seconds are just as good as decisions that took months. Unlike this book‚ it took me months to finally decide what to do. The big decision I had to make was where I was going to go to college. It seems fairly simple‚ just pick a school to go to for the next four

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    The Tipping Point How Little Things Can Make a Big Differene Malcom Gladwell’s book The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference focuses on defining and outlining why trends and phenomenon occur. Gladwell outlines the occurrence of trends through three laws: The Law of the Few‚ The Stickiness Factor‚ and The Power of Context. The Law of the Few suggests that roughly twenty percent of the nations population stimulate the occurrence of trends. These sorts of people include Connectors

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    popularized by Malcolm Gladwell‚ is considered a key to success. Though hard work is necessary for mastering something‚ do we really need to spend 10‚000 hours or is there more to this than Gladwell presented in his book Outliers? With further research it was found that 10‚000 hours is not the end all be all for mastery. In fact‚ Gladwell was wrong because he oversimplified what is necessary for mastery and the amount of work people need to put in by a long shot. In chapter two of Malcolm Gladwell’s

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    Malcolm Gladwell presents his thesis of small tipping points to a bigger problem in the very title of the book. Within the first chapter‚ he introduces the simple idea that there are three simple “tipping points” that causes a large problem. From there‚ he elaborates on his different causes in a full chapter with other examples to help prove his point. Gladwell uses plenty of examples that the general population could pull from memory easily and then proceeds to use these examples to make more challenging

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    Professor Davina Warden English 105 12 October 2013 Building up to10‚000 Hours Can you name a skill of yours that you can confidently say you have been able to master at? Now think this‚ how long did it take you to be skillful at it? Author Malcolm Gladwell introduces his theory of the 10‚000 hour rule in his book‚ Outliers the Story of Success. In the chapter “The 10‚000-Hour Rule‚ he introduces his theory that shows how 10‚000 hours is the amount of practice time it takes a person to be extremely

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