Why Slow Learners are More Likely to Succeed in Life — Here’s the Proof!
Often, I hear people say this: "But I am a slow learner". They see it as a disadvantage and often believe that they are not capable of learning well or doing as well as people that learn as fast, which is not true. There are great benefits to being a slow learner, and if you are one, then you should be happy about it. This article will expose you to the benefits of why being a slow learner is of great advantage.
Actual learning requires understanding, and understanding is derived from the time spent in learning. The more time you spend learning, the more you get to understand the basic rudiments, which you can later build upon. In the process, you gain deeper understanding, retention, and other benefits.
Quality Over Speed
As much as speed is important, it is not of much benefit if basic and foundational concepts are not well grasped. At the end, one will have to come back to them, costing more time in the process. I can remember a movie that I watched titled "Cars". It is a car racing movie in which a top-rising car was asked to push a machine that is used to tile roads. Asper his roots are from speed; he pushed the machine with the thoughts of speed alone without having to think of the quality of the work he is doing. At the end of the day, he did a bad job and was asked to do it again.
You may think this story does not align, but yeah, it does. The lesson here is that if you rushly run over a concept without fully understanding the rudiments,. When you get to the finish line, you will feel as if you didn't learn anything or have forgotten most of the things you had learnt on the way. Why is that? That is because you did not spend enough time to gain a deep understanding of the concept before moving on. You were focused on speed and covering everything in time but instead you wasted time doing nothing.
Critical Thinking and Reflection
One major advantage that slow learners have is the ability to reflect, ask questions, or challenge assumptions, which can lead to a richer learning experience. As a slow learner, when you try to reflect more on the concept you begin to gain deeper understanding, greater creativity, and even better problem-solving skills as you think through the material deeply.
These are what fast learners don't give time to. Most fast learners are expert in memorisation, but they don't have a deeper understanding of the concept. Instead, they base their understanding on the surface level. This is why being a slow-learner comes at a great advantage.
Resilience and Persistence
As a slow learner, the more you are able to fully grasp each concept and move to the next concept, you build a resilient and persistent nature. A nature that makes you stay through a concept till you have full understanding, which is applicable to scenarios in the real world.
In the real world, when you face difficult situations, because you have built up the patience, resilience, and persistence to stay through difficult concepts to understand. You will be able to work in difficult situations to reflect and solve complex situations.
And Many More...
Asides from these, we can say that slow learners gain long term retention and mastery, and this is because of the time spent on reflection and having a deeper understanding of the basic concepts.
We can also talk about creativity and originality. When you take time on a particular concept and reflect more on them. You will begin to discover other unique perspectives or possible approaches that others can miss.
Shocking Truth
Most of the greatest minds recorded were called Slow Learners. And that is because of the quality it takes and the skill set built as a slow learner. Examples are:
Leonardo da Vinci who is one of the greatest minds ever recorded, struggled in academics while he was younger. He was termed a slow learner by his teacher and at the end, he became a master of various fields in art, anatomy and engineering.
Albert Einstein was slow to speak fluently until he was four years old. His teachers thought he was mentally slow and even suggested that he would not amount to anything. Despite all these, Einstein was the one who developed most of the concepts used in physics today.
Thomas Edison who was home taught by his mom after he was labelled in school that he could not keep up with lessons and often asked questions. At the end of the day, Edison became one of history's greatest inventors.
There are many more on the list if you check. I believe that you can now see that being a slow learner is a good thing that can make you perform better than peers who believe they learn faster than you do.
Posted Using InLeo Alpha
I think it has something to do with the adversity quotient. However, there are a lot of factors that may contribute to why slow learners may seem to be successful. I know you are not slow, you are indeed brilliant!
hmm adversity quotient...First time I am hearing that.
True, there are factors that contribute to one to be successful and being slow as grasping something do not make one less brilliant.
I don't agree with you in this case. I think fast learner always has the advantages over slow learners. I feel that fast learners means they can do the same task faster than slow learners and it saves time. In the case of other things you mentioned depends on the understanding power. Suppose one slow learner took 30 minutes to understand a thing and a fast learner understood it in 10 minutes. So, is that case I don't think slow learners have any favorable condition. Fast learners don't focus on only a single matter. If there are loopholes, then I don't think that person needs to learn more and can't be considered as fast learner.
yeah being fast comes with an advantage, but also being a slow learner doesn't mean one is not as brilliant as someone who may grasp something faster. The truth is the main difference between these two is time. If someone who is slow gives in the time and effort towards the same task. He may even understand it better than someone who may have picked it up faster.
I do not totally disregard that fast learning is not advantage but at the same time being slow at learning and taking time to break down the concept is of greater advantage than just memorising the concept without having a deep understanding of how it works.
I never think slow learners are disadvantaged, and I feel they can do their tasks pretty well. I just don't like to compare slow learners with fast learners. I feel if we complete a task within a suitable time period, then slow learner or fast learner doesn't matter. By the way, I am also one of the slow learners.
I feel im with intishar on this too. I don't think there's any benefit being a slow learner. Maybe taking time to do tasks and checking back and proofreading etc is good to be slower but I don't think that applies to learning.
If someone is able to absorb the same knowledge but at a faster speed, the fast learner is actually better. Like people are looking for those that can step up and get good you know. you see competitions like Hell's kitchen master chef. There's no time for slow learners. You gotta learn fast and prove yourself or you get booted out.
It's also hard to say slow learners. Sometimes people have a unique way at perceiving things like a mental disablity etc. There's a lot of autism people that are super good at something like maths etc.
Anyways what I'm trying to say is there's a lot of factors that play into being successful and I don't think being a slow learner actually makes that much of an impact.
I feel a more accurate way to say is people that take time to plan out and do things slowly are more likely to succeed and yes i can agree to that as people with plans usually do better than those that are just yoloing. plans take time! Of course it's not always but I want to say most of the time those that have a plan are going to execute while those that don't are pretty much coinflipping
You are also right, but look at it this well. Indeed, there are times when speed is needed, but when it comes to actually learning, learning at your own pace in order to understand the rudiment, the basics, and the foundation perfectly is important. If one only chooses to memorise without spending time to question the reason, reflecting on them and moving to the next task will one day come back to it to memorise again regardless if they planned things out or not.
But you're assuming that a fast learner is memorising. I was saying fast learners can absorb the knowledge faster. They just get it. They understand the concepts faster. It's not about memorising.
You're correlating fast learners with memorising and that's the problem
Theres a kid from China self learn how to build rockets at age of 6-8 or something. There's kids that are grandmasters in chess at like 10-12 now where most people prob get at age 18+ for those dedicated. Then those that alr have a degree at 15 or somethininy lol. I wouldn't call these a slow learner and definitely don't think this stuff can be just memorised. Some people are just geniuses. The people you mentioned may have had a slow start but I wouldn't say they are slow learners. They were just late bloomers. Their potential was always there they saw the world different and they were light years ahead of people of their time