I see your anecdote, and I raise it and the evidence hierarchy with Ericsson's correlational research on "deliberate practice".
I see your bizarre, not-quite-comprehensible retort, assume from your follow ups that you are contradicting the presented claim and raise you a "What the heck? Actually go read Ericsson et al. before you engage in this kind of petty condescension."
This finding is entirely in keeping with the literature and this outcome is exactly what one would expect to observe in such a situation. Ericsson and other 'real researchers' have done extensive related studies on what kind of goal produces the best outcomes depending on level of expertise. The 'quality' goal fares consistently poorly for the beginner, across disciplines. (It is better to switch to aiming for quality once already at a reasonably high level.)
'Deliberate practice!!!' is an important finding, but it isn't the only one out there. You have abused the appeal to the authority of Ericsson.
Out there in hypothesis land, I'm wondering whether beginners need something close to play-- they can't do directed practice yet because they don't know what goals to aim for, but they do need to acquire a large quantity of tacit knowledge.
http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2008/08/quantity-always-trumps-quality.html
For some reason it just seems we in particular could learn something from this anecdote.
Iterate more. The practice effect is your friend as is mining out positive outliers in really huge sets. I wanted to also mention something about using going meta as a way to procrastinate but I feared I would summon a Newsome.
Edit: This has been mentioned before. I think it is good to remind people of it. Desrtopa writes:
It is therefore best to assume this is a parable.