Episodes

  • Here’s the video version: https://youtu.be/wcU7ch-MFW0

    This is a Q&A video and podcast series based on a question from a therapist in Glasgow, Scotland.

    I hope this email finds you well.

    I'm not sure whether this will get to you, but wanted to reach out as I have been feeling in a bit of a crisis with my practice as psychotherapist. And have been reading your book 'First Kiss'

    To put it bluntly - there is too much choice! I am constantly distracted and preoccupied by the great myriad of trainings, books, models, etc. And find myself paralysed at times on what to actually do with people. I want to help and be the best I can.

    I have been excited and intrigued by your writings, and the writing of Dr. Scott Miller as well, and I appreciate that there are factors more important than the therapeutic school/model, but it still leaves me anxious about what do I actually subscribe to in a session, as I can't just do anything/everything, I still need to present a coherent narrative to my clients, and link that to the work we do together. Even integrative or transdiagnostic models (like PBT or Multimodal Therapy) feel overwhelming.

    And when I look at Deliberate Practice, it seems great, but doesn't answer my overall questions.

    I wonder, should i just pick a good, well-fitting for me, model, and then work at practicing the best version of that i can? Or whether I am missing something entirely?

    So I wanted to write in case there was anything you could point me in the direction of reading or doing that could help.

    Warmest regards

    Peter

    Timestamp:

    00:00 Intro00:07 Email from a therapist in Scotland03:14 Step 1: What is your belief about how healing takes place?04:31 Step 2: Identify 2-3 approaches that resonnates with you. 06:34 Step 3: Your History of Change07:34 Step 4: Your Clinical History with Clients08:51 Step 5: Develop Your Own Blueprint of How You Conduct Therapy Sessions10:43 Step 6: Capture Weekly Therapy Learnings (WTL)12:29 Step 7: Retrieval Practice13:50 Our Misunderstandings of What "Evidence-Based Practice (EBP)" is.15:24 Invitation to Pose Your Questions

    For previous podcast episodes, click here.

    Submission of Questions

    Questions have the power to bring us together, as questions put us on a quest.I would love to hear from you if you would like your questions to be answered in detail. Drop a comment below or email me at [email protected]

    Thanks for reading Frontiers of Psychotherapist Development! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.

    Warm Welcome to New Folks on Frontiers of Psychotherapist Development (FPD)

    If you are new here, I just want to say a big hello to you and would love to hear from you. Tell me a bit about you and where you are from. Drop me an email [email protected]

    Click here to see more resources about Frontiers of Psychotherapist Development and Frontiers Friday.

    Daryl Chow Ph.D. is the author of The First Kiss, co-author of Better Results, and The Write to Recovery, Creating Impact, and the new book The Field Guide to Better Results .



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • Frontiers Radio podcast is back!

    Here’s the video version:

    This is a Q&A video based on a question from a therapist in Montreal: "When Do You Get Time to Read?"

    I just wanted to say once again that I really appreciate your newsletter. I look forward to reading it every week. This week, I especially liked the comment on the importance of giving more attention to the conversational nature of psychotherapy in our training. I also liked the quote at the end, "It takes two to know one", which made me appreciate the importance of supervision and co-development groups to understand our clients better.

    I wanted to ask you a more personal question. When do you take time to read? I am asking this because there are so many interesting articles and books that are on my reading list but somehow I barely manage to make the time to read. I have a 2 year-old boy so that makes it a bit trickier too, but you and other therapists have children too.

    Thank you for your work, it's inspiring.

    Admittedly, if you look at the timestamp below, my response stretches a little further than the original question. Timestamp: 00:00 When Do You Get Time to Read? 01:13 The Daily Practical 02:06 Thinking is a monologue; reading is a dialogue 03:32 What Not to Do 05:01 Taking care of our intentions 05:57 Reading strategy 08:08 The 4 Tenets of becoming a Deep Learner 09:41 Developing a Personalised Learning System (PLS) 10:55 The Ignorant Section 11:45 What to Read 14:08 What Format to Read On 16:57 Periods of "No inputs from other minds" 17:33 Summary 18:28 Invitation to your questionsFor previous podcast episodes, click here.

    Submission of Questions

    Questions have the power to bring us together, as questions put us on a quest.I would love to hear from you if you would like your questions to be answered in detail. Drop a comment below or email me at [email protected]

    Thanks for reading Frontiers of Psychotherapist Development. Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.

    Warm Welcome to New Folks on Frontiers of Psychotherapist Development (FPD)

    If you are new here, I just want to say a big hello to you and would love to hear from you. Tell me a bit about you and where you are from. Drop me an email [email protected]

    Click here to see more resources about Frontiers of Psychotherapist Development and Frontiers Friday.

    Daryl Chow Ph.D. is the author of The First Kiss, co-author of Better Results, and The Write to Recovery, Creating Impact, and the new book The Field Guide to Better Results .



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
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  • n this week's tip, I'd talk about how we can specifically listen for changes between sessions, and why measuring a person's wellbeing matters more than a symptom-specific measure.

    If you have missed the previous videos on how to improve working alliance and being outcome informed, here are links:

    Seek to be Disconfirmed The Devil is the Details Between Sessions How to Use Measures Less Like an Assessment Tool...


    Time Stamps:
    00:00: Introduction
    00:47: Listening for Differences Between Sessions
    01:02: Limits of Symptom-Specific Measures
    02:53: Paying Attention to Changes Outside of Therapy

    Note: Any personally identifiable information in clinical examples used are changed, in order to protect their confidentiality and privacy.

    Related Links:

    Melissa Bond's research on the limitations of the DASS measure and why it was not designed to be used as a routine outcome measure. Podcast episode on The Dyson Vacuum Cleaner and Making Progress Visible

    ---

    📜 Becoming a Deep Learner:
    If you value lifelong learning and want to leverage this into your clinical effectiveness as a mental health professional, check out The Deep Learner course. https://darylchowcourses.teachable.com/p/deeplearner/ -

    --
    🎁 Finally, would like to receive 5 wicked handpicked recommendations each Friday? Subscribe to our Frontiers Friday newsletter: 🎯 https://darylchow.substack.com

    Here's a sample of past FF newsletters:
    1. On Highly Sensitive Persons: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760832_frontiers-friday-101-sensitivity-part-i-
    2. On Emotions: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760804_frontiers-friday-95-emotions-part-i-
    3. On Deliberate Practice: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760599_frontiers-friday-51-deliberate-practice-part-v-



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • In this week's Therapy Tip of the Week #7 (TTW), we talk about how to use outcome monitoring tools, not as an assessment tool, but as a conversational tool.

    If you have missed the previous videos on how to improve working alliance, here are links:

    1. Seek to be Dis-confirmed
    2. The Devil is the Details Between Sessions
    3. How to Elicit Nuanced Feedback

    ⏳ Time Stamps:
    00:00: Introduction
    00:40: Not Just an Assessment Tool
    01:08: Why Measure at Each Session
    02:44: A Clinical Example of Conflicting Ratings

    ➡ Sidenote:
    There are backfire effects if we use measures purely as an assessment tool. See this: The Tyranny of Metrics.

    Note: Any personally identifiable information in clinical examples used are changed, in order to protect their confidentiality and privacy.

    ---

    📜 Becoming a Deep Learner:
    If you value lifelong learning and want to leverage this into your clinical effectiveness as a mental health professional, check out The Deep Learner course. https://darylchowcourses.teachable.com/p/deeplearner/ -

    --
    🎁 Finally, would like to receive 5 wicked handpicked recommendations each Friday? Subscribe to our Frontiers Friday newsletter: 🎯 https://darylchow.substack.com

    Here's a sample of past FF newsletters:
    1. On Highly Sensitive Persons: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760832_frontiers-friday-101-sensitivity-part-i-
    2. On Emotions: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760804_frontiers-friday-95-emotions-part-i-
    3. On Deliberate Practice: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760599_frontiers-friday-51-deliberate-practice-part-v-



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • In Therapy Tip of the Week #6, we continue on the topic of improving working alliance. Here's my recommendation, when seeking for feedback, avoid talking about... you!

    If you have missed the previous videos on how to improve working alliance, here are links:


    ⏳ Time Stamps:

    00:00: Introduction
    01:00: Using Depersonalised language
    01:42: What Feedback is Not
    02:02: Feedback to Feed-Forward
    04:14: Summary

    Note: Any personally identifiable information in clinical examples used are changed, in order to protect their confidentiality and privacy.

    📕 Related Link:

    Capturing Weekly Therapy Learnings How Do You Get Better At Eliciting Feedback? How Do You Get Better at Receiving Feedback? 📜 Becoming a Deep Learner:
    If you value lifelong learning and want to leverage this into your clinical effectiveness as a mental health professional, check out The Deep Learner course. https://darylchowcourses.teachable.com/p/deeplearner/ ---
    🎁 Finally, would like to receive 5 wicked recommendations each Friday? Subscribe to our Frontiers Friday newsletter:

    🎯https://darylchow.substack.com

    Here's a sample of past FF newsletters: 1. On Highly Sensitive Persons: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760832_frontiers-friday-101-sensitivity-part-i- 2. On Emotions: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760804_frontiers-friday-95-emotions-part-i- 3. On Deliberate Practice: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760599_frontiers-friday-51-deliberate-practice-part-v-

    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • "Every impactful person brings to you themselves and not needing to proof ‘how impactful I am’, ‘how smart I am’, and ‘how needed I am.’" ~ Sr Joan Chittister.

    If the therapy room is a vessel, it needs a scaffold in order for you to create a healing environment so as to help the person who is in distress.

    But how do you structure a therapeutic session so that it is impactful for your client and not get caught up with trying to be “impactful…smart…needed”?

    I want to help you solve this particular issue: How to develop a sense of structure in how you conduct therapy sessions.


    Shownotes:

    1. To read this article, go to https://darylchow.substack.com
    2. Charles Eisenstein (see his Substack newsletter and his books, Sacred Economics and The More Beautiful World That Our Hearts Know).
    3. Cultures of Healing by Robert Fancher
    4. To Sign up to Structure and Impact, click here.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • Dissonance can be a powerful ingredient for learning. How do we challenge our intuition in order to listen to our client's unspokens in order to foster a deeper connection with them?

    In this video, I recommend an exercise that I use called the "Rate and Predict," to help me open up the conversation in therapy.

    ⏳ Time Stamps:

    00:00 Introduction
    00:25: What is the Rate and Predict Exercise?
    01:25: Seeking to be Disconfirmed
    02:30: A Clinical Example
    Note: Any personally identifiable information in clinical examples used are changed, in order to protect their confidentiality and privacy.

    📕 Related Link:
    1.
    https://darylchow.com/frontiers/the-tension-of-opposites-clinical-intuition-vs-clinical-data-part-2-of-2/

    ---
    📜 Becoming a Deep Learner: If you value lifelong learning and want to leverage this into your clinical effectiveness as a mental health professional, check out The Deep Learner course.
    https://darylchowcourses.teachable.com/p/deeplearner/

    ---
    🎁 Finally, would like to receive 5 wicked recommendations each Friday? Subscribe to our Frontiers Friday newsletter:
    https://darylchow.substack.com Here's a sample of past FF newsletters:
    1. On Highly Sensitive Persons:
    https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760832_frontiers-friday-101-sensitivity-part-i-
    2. On Emotions: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760804_frontiers-friday-95-emotions-part-i-
    3. On Deliberate Practice: https://darylchow.substack.com/p/4760599_frontiers-friday-51-deliberate-practice-part-v-



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • In this week's therapy tip of the week, we are going to talk about the subject that you as a psychotherapist would be more than familiar with–except that it's not what you expect.
    ⏳ Time Stamps: 00:00 Introduction 01:08 Three Parts of Working Alliance 01:53 Perspective Taking vs. Perspective Getting 03:14 Highly Effective Therapists and Lower Initial Working Alliance Ratings 03:43 Tip: Compare and Contrast Between Sessions
    Note: Any personally identifiable information in clinical examples used are changed, in order to protect their confidentiality and privacy.
    📕 Resources/ Related Links: 1. https://darylchow.com/frontiers/altered/ 2. https://darylchow.com/frontiers/solvingforpatterns/
    --- 📜 Becoming a Deep Learner: If you value lifelong learning and want to leverage this into your clinical effectiveness as a mental health professional, check out The Deep Learner course.
    --- 🎁 Finally, would like to receive 5 wicked recommendations each Friday? Subscribe to our Frontiers Friday newsletter: https://darylchow.substack.com
    Here's a sample of past FF newsletters: 1. On Highly Sensitive Persons: 2. On Emotions: 3. On Deliberate Practice:

    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com

  • As psychotherapists, it's easy to get lost in our heads. Our pet theories end up dominating and preventing us from being in touch with the person in front of us.

    In this Therapy Tip of the Week, I'd talk about how psychotherapists can employ principles of embodied cognition—the idea of embodiment as a way of thinking—to help you deepen your empathic understanding of your clients, especially in stuck situations.

    ⏳ Time Stamps:
    1. Intro (00:00)
    2. What is embodied cognition? A clinical example (00:42)
    3. Personal story (04:59)
    4. Related resources on embodied cognition (06:31)

    Note: Any personally identifiable information in clinical examples used are changed, in order to protect their confidentiality and privacy.

    📕 Resources:
    1. Focusing by Eugene Gendlin: focusing.org
    2. The Extended Mind by Annie Murphy Paul


    ---
    📜 Becoming a Deep Learner:
    If you value lifelong learning and want to leverage this into your clinical effectiveness as a mental health professional, check out The Deep Learner course. https://darylchowcourses.teachable.com/p/deeplearner/

    ---
    🎁 Finally, would like to receive 5 wicked recommendations each Friday?
    Subscribe to our Frontiers Friday newsletter: https://darylchow.substack.com

    Here's a sample of past FF newsletters:
    1. On Highly Sensitive Persons: https://mailchi.mp/darylchow/101frontiersfriday
    2. On Emotions: https://mailchi.mp/darylchow/95frontiersfriday
    3. On Deliberate Practice: https://mailchi.mp/darylchow/51frontiersfriday



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • Understanding the current season you are in helps you figure out where you are at, in order to know where you need to go. Appreciating the seasonality of your inner and outer life provides you a navigational guide as to where you need to nurture your nature. In this video, I provide a way to open a conversational doorway about this with your client, so as to provide focus and directionality of the therapeutic endeavour.

    ⏳ Time Stamps:
    1. Intro (
    00:00)
    2. What to ask your clients (
    00:59)
    3. The Season Points to the Needs (
    02:07)
    4. A Clinical Example (
    02:32)
    Note: Any personally identifiable information in clinical examples used are changed, in order to protect their confidentiality and privacy.

    📕 Resources:
    1. The Fourth Turning by William Strauss and Neil Howe
    2. Wintering by Catherine May
    ---
    📜 Becoming a Deep Learner: If you value lifelong learning and want to leverage this into your clinical effectiveness as a mental health professional, check out The Deep Learner course.

    ---

    --- 🎁 Finally, would like to receive 5 wicked recommendations each Friday? Subscribe to our Frontiers Friday newsletter: https://darylchow.substack.com

    Here's a sample of past FF newsletters:

    1. On Highly Sensitive Persons: https://mailchi.mp/darylchow/101frontiersfriday
    2. On Emotions: https://mailchi.mp/darylchow/95frontiersfriday
    3. On Deliberate Practice: https://mailchi.mp/darylchow/51frontiersfriday



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • In this series on Therapy Tip of the Week, we'll provide psychologists, counsellors and psychotherapists one practical tip in each episode.
    My idea of giving you this is not so much as to prescribe to you what you should be doing, but to describe possibilities, to give you ideas that can inspire you to create your own ideas in the practice of psychotherapy. My hopes of doing this is that it may widen the palette of possibilities to allow you to see a wide array of different things that you could do that is not restricted by particular theoretical models, but tapping into various schools of therapy that can help you in a synergistic and integrative way. By exploring these various tips of the week, I hope that you get to think about how to construct first principles that will guide you in your work as well.

    In this episode, I talk about one idea relating to William Glasser's 5 Basic Needs:
    1. Survival
    2. Love and Belonging
    3. Autonomy
    4. Freedom
    5. Fun

    For the video version, go to https://youtu.be/1v1XxBGFdUc


    ⏳ Time Stamps:
    1. Intro (00:00)
    2. Capturing Your Weekly Therapy Learnings (01:29)
    3. 5 Basic Needs (02:18)
    i. Survival (03:27)
    ii. Love and Belonging (3:49)
    iii. Autonomy (04:20)
    iv. Freedom (04:34)
    v. Fun (04:57)
    4. A Clinical Example

    ✍️ Shownotes:
    1. darylchow.com/frontiers/weeklytherapylearnings
    2. William Glasser Reality Therapy / Choice Theory
    3. Check out the Frontiers of Psychotherapist Development website: darylchow.com/frontiers

    4. Note: Any personally identifiable information in clinical examples used are changed, in order to protect their confidentiality and privacy.

    📜 Becoming a Deep Learner:
    If you value lifelong learning and want to leverage this into your clinicial effectiveness as a mental health professional, check out The Deep Learner course. https://darylchowcourses.teachable.com/p/deeplearner/

    🎁 Finally, would like to receive 5 wicked recommendations each Friday?
    Subscribe to our Frontiers Friday newsletter
    Here's a sample of past FF newsletters:
    1. On Highly Sensitive Persons
    2. On Emotions
    3. On Deliberate Practice



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • In this esisode, I will walk you through on a practical level, how to use a framework of clinical supervision to translate to actual improvement in outcome. We will take a step-by-step approach to examine what entails a "Coaching for Performance" and "Coaching for Development" framework. For more, check out the course Reigniting Clinical Supervision (RCS), darylchow.com/courses
    Time Stamps: Introduction (0:00)
    Coaching for Performance and Development (01:07)
    Components of Coaching for Performance (02:05)
    What is Supervision Really For? (06:20) Components of Coaching for Development (06:56)
    Visual Guide for Reigniting Clinical Supervision (11:43)
    ---
    For the video version, see: https://youtu.be/zM3YXLaFVjk



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com

  • This is a keynote address given by Daryl Chow, Ph.D. for a virtual conference hosted by the University of New South Wales (UNSW).

    Cumulative evidence in psychotherapy suggests that we not only do not improve with experience, our typical professional development efforts by attending workshops, and engaging in clinical supervision do not lead to better performance. The aim of this keynote is to address the current cutting edge development of deliberate practice in psychotherapy, and its implications on how we can leverage to improve our outcomes.

    Timestamps:

    Introduction (0:00)

    Why the Distinction Between Performing and Learning is Critical (06:03)

    Pop Quiz (07:33)

    Effectiveness of Psychotherapy (09:35)

    Definition of Deliberate Practice (16:11)

    4 Levels to Deliberate Practice (20:05)

    Clinical Supervision (22:06)

    I. The Edges (24:28)

    1. Super-Vision (24:55)

    2. Measure Growth, Not Competence (26:34)

    3. Reduce Negative Variance and Increase Positive Variance (28:23)

    II. The Leverages (30:03)

    1. The 80/20 Rule (30:34)

    2. Three Types of Knowledge (31:54)

    3. Develop a Centralised Personal Learning System (PLS) (32:42)

    Closing: 4 Types of Learners.

    The Dabbler,

    The Hacker,

    The Obsessive, and

    Mastery Learning/The Late Bloomer: (36:20)

    ---

    For the Gift Pack cited in this keynote, go to darylchow.com/traininggifts

    For more about the Frontiers of Psychotherapist Development, go to darylchow.com/frontiers

    Big thanks to UNSW Masters of Forensic Psychology and Master of Clinical Psychology Programs for making this publicly available.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • In this exclusive episode #10 on Frontiers Radio, we have a special guest, Dr. Scott Miller. We talked about several luminary figures who shaped and influenced his life, pivotal turning points, the writing process and his thoughts around the future of psychotherapy.

    Time Stamps

    Intro (00:00)

    People who shaped Scott's life (05:30)

    Lynn Johnson and Hal Miller (07:11)

    Michael Lambert (15:36)

    On Writing (18:24)

    Impact of changing track from accounting to psychology (21:15)

    Pivotal Turning Points (24:50)

    Why Scott Wrote Book of A Mormon (29:39)

    Mark Hubble (42:O0)

    The Losing Faith Article (44:19)

    Scott Miller's evolution (48:39)

    The Moving Bubble (52:52)

    Measurement (54:12)

    K Anders Ericcson (56:21)

    Bruce Wampold (62:53)

    The Bubble Redux: Going Forward in the Application of Deliberate Practice (65:35)

    Taxonomy of Deliberate Practice Activities (TDPA) worksheets (72:31)

    For more details of show notes and the video edition, go to darylchow.com/frontiers/episode10



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • I believe one of the most critical things you can do is to create a personalised learning system (PLS).

    Though the payoff is not immediate, but like growing a seed, the benefit is tremendous, especially if you value personal and professional development.
    In this episode of Frontiers Radio, I take you down a road trip of my note-taking system, and why, after over 10 years, I'm now making a switch to an app call Obsidian.

    For shownotes go to darylchow.com/frontiers/episode9

    or watch the video version on https://youtu.be/KpBfmtpP2h8

    For more details on the Deep Learner web-based workshop, go to darylchow.com/courses



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • In the 1950s, A fairly unusual be-spectacled and slender Lieutenant Gilbert Daniels was tasked to solve one of the biggest problems in the US Air Force: Plane crashes.

    What he unravelled in the process holds a unique lesson for psychotherapists, and why we have been failing to implement and scale "evidence-based" practices as we try to fit the "average person" instead of the individual.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • We pay tribute to K. Anders Ericsson in today's episode.

    He is known by many to be "the expert on expertise." His work, along with his colleagues had a profound impact on a wide array of professional domains such as sports, music, chess, and more recently in the field of psychotherapy. His four decades worth of research also informed the hugely popular book by Malcolm Gladwell, Outlier. (Though the "10,000hr" rule thing got misrepresented by others).

    ~~~
    In this episode, you'd hear

    - the impact he had on me personally.

    - the foreword that he wrote for our book, Better Results (co-authored with Scott Miller and Mark Hubble, APA, 2020), and

    - a short poem I wrote in Oct 23, 2010 that was dedicated to him.

    Better Results book was also dedicated to Dr. Ericsson.
    ~~~

    Show Notes:

    Peak by Ericsson and Pool

    Ericsson, Krampe and Teach-Römer's seminal article on The Role of Deliberate Practice in the Acquisition of Expert Performance

    The Music of Psychotherapy: Learning in a Wicked Environment (a blogpost I wrote in Aug 2019 about my first encounter with Ericsson in Kansas City)

    Scott Miller's recent interview with Ericsson.

    A meta-analysis on deliberate practice by Macnamara et al. 2014

    Our reanalysis of the 2014 meta-analysis

    Music, Right in Front of Me, by Daryl Chow and produced by DC and Joel Louie.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • I found myself telling this story to me kids some nights ago. I believe it's worth retelling here, especially in the current anxious climate surrounding the coronavirus.

    After the story, I say a few words about why we need to express our heartfelt thanks to people behind the scenes in our healthcare.

    Plus, why we must support our local communities and businesses when this comes to pass.

    And finally, news about our Deep Learner workshop, plus giveaway of the audiobook version of my book. Promo code is given near the end of this episode.

    Thank you for listening. Thank you for your continued care of your clients in therapy through this global pandemic. Take precious care.

    p/s: Due to copyrights reason, I'm not able to use a song that you must listen in these times. Play George Harrison's All Things Must Pass after listening to this episode.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • "I spent half of my life lost in an education system that pushed for results and performance... and failed.. Even when I Began to perform well in undergrad and so on, I wasn't learning; I was performing."

    In today's episode, we draw a distinction between "performing" and "learning," and what we can do to become deep learners.

    For a video version of this episode, go to https://youtu.be/APLjlZJa3B0

    If you haven't subscribed to the Frontiers list to get updates to help you be at your leading edge of development, click here


    Show notes:

    1. For more on performing vs learning, check out the research done by Robert Bjork and his colleagues.

    Soderstrom, N. C., & Bjork, R. A. (2015). Learning Versus Performance: An Integrative Review. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 10(2), 176-199. doi:10.1177/1745691615569000

    2. For more about the Deep Learner web-based workshop, go to darylchow.com/courses.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit darylchow.substack.com
  • No manufacturing company in the US and UK was initially willing to license his vacuum cleaner.

    James Dyson was laughed at for designing a transparent vacuum cleaner that showed all the filth it sucked up.

    Today, Dyson the company returns over $500 million in annual profits and employs nearly seven thousand people worldwide. Had the founder given up on the “bagless” vacuum cleaner idea, Dyson would be just another name.

    Turns out, therapists have one critical thing to learn from James Dyson's innovation: Making progress visible.

    ---

    Also, listen at the end for a really important question from one of our listeners.



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