BUT it is the work that give the results.
People with natural talent has the capability to reach longer than the "norm" IF they put down the same amount of work in their doings
Roger





Really? I have to try that!MaryAnn wrote:I can do situps in my living room.


pwhitaker wrote:Stephen King said it as well as anyone I've ever read: In his book "Christine" the protagonist brought the beat up old car - Christine - to the local auto body shop and was told by the the cynical old owner in this immortal line: "Sorry kid, you can't polish a turd."

I think this should read "All children can do just as well if [they have the drive to]."bloke wrote: The very people who - in the past - tried to claim that "all children can do just as well if given a chance"


We have to realize that there is a difference between "all children can do just as well if given a chance" and a "measurement system" that requires all students to be at the top. No Child Left Behind would be like requiring every pro football team to win the Superbowl each year. Almost everything on our planet has been measured with The Standard Deviation, establishing the "bell curve" as a mathematical fact. With No Child Left Behind there would be no bell curve - and as far as I know the only way you could do that would be to fudge the statistics.The very people who - in the past - tried to claim that "all children can do just as well if given a chance" later complained about "No Child Left Behind", when they apparently discovered that their truism wasn't necessarily true


JS Bach and Mozart were children of musicians, weren't they? It seems to me it's kind of a standard story - grown-ups are sitting around playing, for fun, and Junior pops up and says "look, Dad, I can play too!" - and pretty soon, he can really play. Musical exposure per se is one thing - these days I don't see how anyone can escape it - but when your people make music part of their lives, you're likely to make the connection according to your abilities.averagejoe wrote:I think that "innate talent" has a lot to do with musical exposure during the first few years of a persons life, much like learning language.




