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Summary Of Outliers By Malcolm Gladwell

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Abagayle Morin AP Statistics, Period 1 August 2015 Outliers Book Summary Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell is the story of success. It is the story of what it really is that makes certain people successful. The book delves into the science of how exactly people climb their way up the latter of success in a way that is new to our society with an idea that is well supported and very logical. The first outlier that Gladwell examines is a small Italian town known as Roseto (Gladwell 4). The author examines this town in the prologue, going on to explain that Roseto is made an outlier by its extremely good health and long lives. The people in Roseto, Gladwell tells us, live so well as a result of how they interact, not how they take care of themselves. …show more content…

In this chapter, Gladwell tells us that when first officers are able to communicate and speak with their pilots without worrying about being degraded or shamed, there are less crashes and higher success rates. Ethnic theory applies because in certain countries, according to Gladwell, it is in their culture to have that respect towards superiors, which can lead to issues in the cockpit. This chapter is possibly my favorite that Gladwell has written, as it delves into the depths of different cultures, how they function, and how that can be conveyed in something that is as seemingly irrelevant as …show more content…

Gladwell believes that the Chinese are good at math for several reasons. In the beginning of the chapter, Gladwell tells us that the Chinese are better at math than English speakers because their numbers are easier for little kids to process, and the way they are added is easier for them to think about. Later in the chapter, Gladwell furthers his thinking to state that another reason the Chinese may be as good at math as they are is because many of their families work on rice paddies. Gladwell states that this has to do with math because it allows the people to be more hardworking and persistent when working on a math problem, where Americans may just give up more easily (Gladwell 247, 248). This chapter is also very interesting, as it explains something that people have been thinking about for a long time in a way that other people have never done

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