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Skill Up: A Software Developer's Guide to Life and Career

You're reading from   Skill Up: A Software Developer's Guide to Life and Career 65 steps to becoming a better developer

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781787287037
Length 302 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Jordan Hudgens Jordan Hudgens
Author Profile Icon Jordan Hudgens
Jordan Hudgens
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Table of Contents (5) Chapters Close

Preface I. Coder Skills II. Freelancer Skills FREE CHAPTER III. Career Skills Index

Chapter 2. Are Developers Born or Made? – Debunking the Myth of Prodigies

When talking to development students, I've discovered one topic that constantly arises in conversation. And that topic is the misconceived notion that great developers are born with a special programming gene. So, let's walk through the question are developers born or made, from a practical perspective.

Are prodigies real?

Before tackling this question, let's take a step back and discuss the topic of prodigies. Because whenever someone thinks that a certain group of individuals are born with superhuman-like talent, they're essentially saying that these special people are prodigies.

The Mozart case study

But are prodigies real? Let's take a look at one of the most famous prodigies of all time, Mozart. At the age of 5, Mozart was playing concert grade music to the royal family. Surely, this would qualify Mozart as a prodigy, right?

In his book, Peak: Secrets from the New Science of Expertise, researcher Anders Ericsson dispels a number of commonly held prodigy myths. He had this to say about Mozart:

"If you compare the kind of music pieces that Mozart can play at various ages to today's Suzuki-trained children, he is not exceptional. If anything, he's relatively average."

In his book, Ericsson dedicates a full chapter to debunking the concept of prodigies. And in each case, he illustrates that the individuals achieved their respective levels of success through massage amounts of work.

Are developers born or made?

Extending the Mozart case study, let's discuss how this applies to developers. Whenever we see a skilled coder it's easy to think that they were born with the innate ability to build applications and that learning new languages and frameworks comes easy to them.

However, nothing could be further from the truth. Over the years I've known more developers than I can count and I have yet to find a single one that was a born developer. I know programmers that work for Google and Amazon, along with computer science professors who specialize in research that boggles my mind to think about. And as amazing as all of these individuals are, each one of them became a great developer through hard work and dedication.

The tipping point

In Chapter 1, Discovering the Tipping Point for Developers I've discussed the tipping point for developers. The longer I teach and the more I work on my own coding skills, the more I'm convinced that the key to excellence is as straightforward as focused practice.

If you want to become a skilled developer badly enough, and you're willing to:

  • Dedicate the time
  • Learn from experienced teachers
  • Fight through frustrating challenges
  • Continually build projects with features you've never developed before

You're going to wake up one day and realize that everything is clicking and that you've become a professional programmer.

Why we love the prodigy myth

Before I end this chapter, I want to address a subtle issue that explains the reason of why we, as humans, love the idea of prodigies.

The concept of prodigies, individuals born with a natural ability to be successful at a certain skill, such as sports, math, or programming, can be detrimental to our own success. This belief is dangerous because it causes our minds to have negative responses to failure.

For example, if you're an aspiring developer who thinks that programmers are born and not made, when you come across a bug that you can't seem to figure out or a feature you can't build, your first reaction might be:

I guess I wasn't born to do be a developer.

Or:

I wish I had talent like XYZ programmer, everything seems to come so easy to him.

If you catch yourself with thoughts like these, remind yourself that prodigies aren't real.

Developers achieve greatness through smart work and perseverance. The 10,000-hour rule from the Tipping Point book by Malcolm Gladwell may not be exactly accurate. However, it does give a general guide for how much work is required to reach a level of mastery.

If you feel like you weren't born with the "developer gene", go and knock out 10,000 hours of focused practice on building applications. I think you'll be pleasantly surprised to find that you'll become so good, that other people will look at you, and they'll think… that you were just born this way.

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