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The reading act is a
unitary occurrence, meaning that the actions taking place while one is
reading occur simultaneously. However, for the purpose of this discussion,
these actions will be divided into steps, and a schematic diagram
representing these steps of the reading act is shown below.
This article focuses on
the first step, i.e. reception of the written message and specifically the
role of concentration in the reception of the message.

There are many factors
involved in the reception of the message when a person is reading. The
first of these is that the reader must pay attention. Paying
attention is a body function, and therefore does not need to be taught.
However, paying attention as such is a function that is quite useless for
learning, because it is only a fleeting occurrence. Attention usually
shifts very quickly from one object or one thing to the next. The child
must be taught to focus his attention on something and to keep his
attention focused on this something for some length of time. When a person
focuses his attention for any length of time, we refer to it as
concentration. Paying attention therefore, is the body function that
makes the skill of concentration possible, just as the functions of seeing
and hearing make the skills of looking and listening possible.
Concentration rests on
two legs. First, it is an act of will and cannot take place
automatically. The will to focus attention on the message must be
sustained in order to carry out all the actions needed to fully comprehend
the message. Second, it is also a skill, and therefore has to be
taught.
Although LD specialists
acknowledge that “the ability to concentrate and attend to a task for a
prolonged period of time is essential for the student to receive
necessary information and complete certain academic activities,” it seems
that the ability to concentrate is regarded as a “fafrotsky” — a word
coined by Ivan T. Sanderson, and standing for “Things that…FAll
FROm The SKY.” Children who cannot concentrate — simply
because they have not learned to do so — are therefore frequently
diagnosed as suffering from ADD (“attention deficit disorder”). If one
inquires what has been done to teach these children to concentrate,
one invariably finds that nothing has been done at all.
Concentration must be
taught, after which one's proficiency can be constantly improved by
regular and sustained practice. In the same way, one can also teach them
all the other skills that are foundational to reading, and then one finds
that the reading ability of a child, for whom reading previously was a
seemingly endless nightmare, improves by leaps and bounds.
Click here to learn more about
perception, which also plays a role in the reception of the written
message.
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