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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 role of visual perception in the reception of the written
message. Click here
to read an article that explains the role of concentration in the
reception of the message.

When a reader concentrates on a written message, the
next step is that the message must be perceived. In other words,
perception must take place. Before one can read or learn anything, one
has to become aware of it through one of the senses. Usually one has to
hear or see it. Subsequently one has to interpret whatever one has
seen or heard. In essence then, perception means interpretation. Of
course, lack of experience may cause a person to misinterpret what he has
seen or heard. In other words, perception represents our apprehension of a
present situation in terms of our past experiences, or, as stated
so succinctly by the philosopher Immanuel Kant (1724-1804): “We see things
not as they are but as we are.”
The following situation
will illustrate how perception correlates with previous experience:
Suppose a person parks
his car and walks away from it while continuing to look back at it. As he
goes further and further away from his car, it will appear to him as if
his car is gradually getting smaller and smaller. In such a situation none
of us, however, would gasp in horror and cry out, “My car is shrinking!”
Although the sensory perception is that the car is shrinking
rapidly, we do not interpret that the car is changing size. Through
past experiences we have learned that objects do not grow or shrink as we
walk toward or away from them. You have learned that their actual
size remains constant, despite the illusion. Even when one is five blocks
away from one's car and it seems no larger than one's fingernail, one
would interpret it as that it is still one's car and that it hasn't
actually changed size. This learned perception is known as size
constancy.
Pygmies, however, who
live deep in the rain forests of tropical Africa, are not often exposed to
wide vistas and distant horizons, and therefore do not have sufficient
opportunities to learn size constancy. One Pygmy, removed from his usual
environment, was convinced he was seeing a swarm of insects when he was
actually looking at a herd of buffalo at a great distance. When driven
toward the animals he was frightened to see the insects “grow” into
buffalo and was sure that some form of witchcraft had been at work.
A person needs to
interpret sensory phenomena, and this can only be done on the basis of
past experience of the same, similar or related phenomena. Perceptual
ability, therefore, heavily depends upon the amount of perceptual practice
and experience that the subject has already enjoyed. This implies that
perception is a skill that can be improved tremendously through judicious
practice and experience.
A further important point
about perception is that the stratified nature of learning also applies
here. Perception in itself consists of a large number of subskills that
can all be automated. First, there are various ways of perceptualizing,
namely visual, auditory and haptic. The latter includes touch perception
and kinesthetic perception. Because we read with our eyes, visual
perception plays the most important role in the reading act, and will
therefore be discussed at some length.
When a person is reading,
visual discrimination must take place. All printed letters are set
against a certain background. The most important difference between the
letters and the background is that they differ in color. Obviously, the
first discrimination will therefore be in terms of color. The
second discrimination is in terms of foreground-background. The
particular letter, or word, or sentence, that the reader is focused on is
elevated to the level of foreground, whereas everything else within the
field of vision of the reader (the rest of the page and the book, the desk
on which the book is resting, the section of the floor and/or wall that is
visible, etc.) is relegated to the background. Our Latin alphabet consists
of twenty-six letters, each with its corresponding capital letter with a
difference in size and sometimes in shape compared to the lower case
counterpart. The letters all differ in form or shape and
must be discriminated accordingly. Capital letters, being used at the
start of a sentence, sometimes look exactly the same as their lower case
counterparts, and must therefore be discriminated mainly with regard to
size. The letters in dyslexia and DYSLEXIA may all
differ in terms of form and size, but must nevertheless be interpreted as
constituting the same word. One also does not only read letters, but
thoughts, all compiled from a conglomeration of words. A word is
made up of a number of letters arranged in a particular sequence. The
reader must therefore be able to discriminate the letters in terms of
their positions. If a sketch or picture is included in the
text, there must be discrimination of dimensionality as well.
One of the most obvious —
and one of the most common — telltale signs of dyslexia is reversals.
People with this kind of problem often confuse letters like b and
d, either when reading or when writing, or they sometimes read (or
write) words like no for on, or pot for top.
One invariably also finds that these people find it difficult to
distinguish between left and right, or that they find it difficult to
cross the middle line. These difficulties are not signs of minimal
neurological damage, as is often asserted, but simply signs that not
enough had been done to teach these people to distinguish between left and
right, or to cross the middle line.
The human body consists
of two halves, a left side and a right side. The human brain also has two
halves, which are connected by the corpus callosum. Mindful of the wise
words of Immanuel Kant that man does not see things as they are but as
he is, it is inevitable that a person will interpret everything in
terms of his own sidedness. A child or adult, who has not learned to
interpret correctly in terms of his sidedness yet, who has not learned to
distinguish properly between left and right, will inevitably experience
problems when he finds himself in a situation where he is expected to
interpret sidedness. (See the Act of Reading diagram above —
sidedness is a “position in space” interpretation.) One such a situation,
where sidedness plays a particularly important role, is when a person is
expected to distinguish between a b and a d. It is clear
that the only difference between the two letters is the position of the
straight line — it is either left or right.
It is important to note
that people who are confused about left and right cannot use mnemonics or
memory aids while reading, as is often advised by experts. Susan
Hampshire, for example, advises that children should remember that “left”
is the side on which they wear their watch. Girls, she says, sometimes
enjoy having their right hand marked with a pretty ribbon. Serfontein
advises that one should put nail polish on the little finger of the
student's left hand in order to teach him that reading and writing start
on the left-hand side of the paper. These tricks never work to improve
reading ability. This is just like going to China with a Chinese
dictionary and then hoping to be able to speak Chinese. One has to
learn to speak Chinese. In the same way one has to learn to
interpret sidedness. As all the other skills foundational to reading, the
ability to distinguish between left and right must be drummed in so
securely that the person can apply it during reading without having to
think of it at all.
After having
discriminated every letter in terms of color, foreground and background,
form, size and position, letters must be combined into words. The reader
must thus be able to perceive individual parts as a whole. In other words,
he must be able to synthesize.
Although the ability to
analyze, i.e. to perceive the whole in its individual parts, does
play a role in reading, this ability is of the utmost importance in
spelling. To be a good speller, one must be able to analyze.
The above events sound
very complex, and indeed must be recognized as being just that. In reality
they take place all the time — at lightning speed — while a person is
reading, but a good reader is unaware of these events because they have
been automated. It can be compared to driving a car. Try to remember your
first driving lesson. How hard you had to concentrate on what to do
when to prevent the car from wrapping itself around the nearest
tree! Now, after many years of experience and of doing it over and over,
your driving has become an automatism and you need not even think while
you drive. In fact, your mind is probably on something else most of the
time, like talking to the other people in the car, or listening to the
radio, or looking at the beautiful scenery outside.
Speaking is another
example of the importance of drilling some activities to such an extent
that they become automatic. Any person, who speaks a language that he
knows well, does not concentrate on vocabulary, or on sentence structure,
or on grammar. His mind is focused on what he wants to say. |