I have read a number of Ericsson's papers, and most of the Cambridge Handbook; where do they say an equal number of hours of indiscriminate practice is best for beginners as compared to the equivalent effort devoted differently?
I am not, nor have I ever advocated indiscriminate practice as a preferred form of training.
Certainly I agree that beginners benefit most from lots of time spent practicing (total time practicing was a powerful predictor in the studies), but the anecdote in OP was not about two groups of students, one who studied 1 hour a week and the other studied 1 hour a day...
This isn't about time spent. This is about what goal the participants have while doing the activity, with all else being equal. 'Quality' is, empirically, a terrible goal for beginners to be given.
I am not, nor have I ever, advocated indiscriminate practice as a preferred form of training.
How does the OP's claim that the pottery students were better off producing as much as possible by weight not constitute advocacy of indiscriminate practice?
'Quality' is, empirically, a terrible goal for beginners to be given.
Are you going to provide any cites?
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.