Need Talent – Signed Not Afraid to Get My Hands Dirty

A modern painter and decorator.
Worried that your son is entering a job market over-saturated with painters? (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Your child needs a talent, if you find yourself saying:

“My 16 year old son is a very dependable and hardworking young man. He accompanies his father on many jobs in our family run painting business and is becoming a very good painter in his own right. But lately, husband and I have concerned that he will be entering a market already over-saturated with excellent painters with no room for newcomers to make a full-time living. Is all this expertise he has built up lost time?”

Signed, “Not-Afraid-to-Get-My-Hands-Dirty-Mom”

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Need Talent – Signed Frazzled Mom

English: Madison, TN, May 29, 2010 -- Communit...
Worried that son has too many interests but not enough focus?  (Photo credit: Wikipedia- David Fine/FEMA)

Your child needs a talent if you find yourself saying:

“My 13 year old son is exhausting our family because he has so many interests. I’m glad he is enthusiastic, but we never seem to stick long enough with one activity to make a difference to his schooling or to his ability to become really good at something.”

Signed, “Frazzled-Mom”

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Need Talent – Signed I-Got-My-Eyes-On-You

English: I took photo with Canon camera in San...
Worried that your daughter will get snatched up by a part-time worker with no focus? (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

You need your child to develop a talent if you find yourself saying:

“Help! My sweet 16 year old daughter is starting to attract the attention of older homeschooling boys who don’t have a plan beyond working part-time at the local YMCA. She needs a focused talent to expand her world and make her more attractive to eligible bachelors with high expectations.”

Signed, “I-got-my-eyes-on-you-Dad”

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Need Talent – Signed Practical Dad

English: Volunteer Team
Worried that your child’s volunteer activities is not enough to prepare him? (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Your child needs a talent, if you find yourself saying:

“My wife is using a great Christian homeschooling curriculum and she is very happy about its emphasis on character development. I’m happy with it too, but my concern is, will good character alone pay the bills?”

Signed, “Practical Dad”

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Talent Statement Grows Over Time

Babysitting Jobs Can be Leveraged to Bigger Things

Possible scenario of a Talent Statement that changes and grows over time because the opportunities grew as the child developed her talent:

(age 13 – First 100 hours of talent building) I will photograph children that I babysit. I will share those pictures in a digital scrapbook for the parents with notes and comments about their children. I will use my blogging and basic HTML skills to do it.

(age 15 – at 1,000 hours)  I will photograph landscapes and the children that I babysit while traveling with their families on short weekend getaways. I will blog about nannying children on short getaways. I will give tips on the blog about how to use digital photography and how to be a traveling nanny.

(age 16 – at 3,000 hours) I will vlog about how to travel with children while accompanying families as a nanny on extended vacations or business trips in foreign countries. I will create and sell e-guides for educational games that tutor children of wealthy traveling parents.

 

Use Your Environment to Start Talent Building

Use Local Resources to Increase Talent

Start building a talent focus for your child by using the environment you are in. This means use the tools, assets, personal connections, and geography that you have on hand rather than waiting for tools or time you can’t afford today. Create a Talent Statement that will focus your child to act on his first 100 hours of talent building. At the end of the 100 hours, modify the Talent Statement to reflect your child’s increasing skill set and newly discovered opportunities.  Keep modifying and refocusing the talent as you uncover your child’s growing potential.

Copy Best Learning Examples

Cherry Pick from The Best Learning Examples

“Cherry pick” the best of other people’s learning styles and adapt them to fit your custom 10,000 hours of talent building for your child. Because you homeschool, you can afford to pick and choose only the best and thereby avoid mediocrity right from the beginning. To do this you have to accept that it is rare to find in one individual all the learning patterns and examples you need to copy, so be prepared to get aggressive about acquiring tips and tricks from many different sources. One family may excel at extracting learning opportunities when out in nature while another may excel at mathematical learning techniques. Copy those friends ONLY in those areas of learning where they excel.

Online Doodling and Sketching Course

Learn Doodling Online

Unless your goal is to turn your 10,000 hours of talent into an art focus, then all the sketching ability your child will need can be easily satisfied by an online art doodling course. Our homeschooling family has been following the Mark Kistler drawing program and I’m happy to report you can now get free online lessons at Mark Kistler Online Video Art Academy. You can also order the hardcopy sketching and doodling program entitled Mark Kistler’s Draw Squad and Drawing in 3D with Mark Kistler . This will give your child the confidence he needs to sketch out his ideas and visually document the concepts he is assimilating.

Collect Images of Your Talent Online

1952 Bowman Baseball Cards
Got a Talent Card Collection of your own? 1952 Bowman Baseball Cards (Photo credit: Baseball Collection)

Baseball Card image collections for your child’s talent would be a great way to build visual and emotional excitement for your son or daughter. How can you do that when your focus is actually NOT about building 10,000 hours of talent toward a baseball career? There’s a simple answer: use one of the many new Social Media tools available on the Internet. Two very popular tools for creating and sharing image collections are www.flickr.com and www.pinterest.com

Create an account under your name for your child if he is not old enough to open one under his own authority.

Focus – Don’t Excel at Everything

 

Archery 1
Focus on a Talent - Choosing a Target Means Letting Go of Other Goals (Photo credit: sjkcle)

Don’t have your child try to excel at everything he does in pursuit of building 10,000 hours of talent.

Why?

There are some building block activities that contribute toward  your child’s talent, but not every activity should be pursued to a level of world-class performance. For example, one of my children is interested in minerals and would profit from learning how to use a  microscope to study his material at a deeper level. However he would not gain by becoming an expert in microscopes. Added expertise, beyond proficiency, would only detract him from focusing and building up his core interest.