SOLVING STUDENT'S LACK OF ATTENTION
SOLVING
STUDENT’S LACK OF ATTENTION
By
Domenick J. Maglio, PhD. Traditional Realist
The
childhood epidemic of Attention Deficit Disorder and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder is misleading. Children with this diagnosis can focus very well on
things that interest them. The real issue is they have an unwillingness to concentrate
on things they are told to do where they have little interest when they want
they can pay attention.
The
overwhelming majority of these students can eagerly spend hours playing video
games, watching television, reading about dinosaurs, putting on make up or
doing their nails. It is not a problem of paying attention; it is a narrow and
limited field of interest and a lack of discipline to work to expand it.
Our
schools have seen this phenomenon of students not paying attention in certain
academic areas but focusing like a laser beam on things they like. It is
negatively affecting students’ learning especially when studying something that
demands building a foundation of knowledge.
Students in school have to learn and relearn fundamental facts and
skills to build a solid broad knowledge base. A major part of school is not
always new and exciting but must be done to be able to reach a higher level of
thinking.
It would be counter productive and obscene to
label every inattentive child although we are trying with a vengeance to do it
in our nation. The latest approach to tackle this phenomenon is to teach the
teachers to make instruction more interesting by using the student’s interest
to sneak in necessary subject matter. This approach has not been effective
because it wastes valuable time on entertainment rather than developing a
strong academic foundation.
The
appeasement of students through immediate gratification does nothing to correct
a student’s focus deficit; instead it increases it. The entertainment and game
approach to teaching may have temporary success but is destined to fail because
it is competing with television and Hollywood professionals. Student
entertainment expectations are too high to match on a daily basis. Inventing
games to help slide new information into the student’s brains does nothing to impress
him that it will take self-discipline to concentrate and solve future problems.
Persevering until one succeeds is not being fostered.
Students
have to be convinced that concentrating on things that society has deemed
important opens up new worlds. The dosages of work given to a reluctant student
in a particular area should be short and sweet. The exposure to difficult
subjects for the child should end with success and be followed by an activity
that is highly regarded by the student. As the child tastes greater facility in
the formerly distasteful subject the child should be made aware that his
feeling for the subject is becoming more favorable.
Most
children have a proclivity in language arts or the math area but rarely both.
It is the teacher’s creative power that is needed to set up situations to show
how to master simple fundamental skills. This builds the competencies of
reluctant students in these more difficult skill areas. The mastering of these
competencies enhances the child's self-confidence to try more challenging work.
Once the student develops more competence in the subject he begins to rely more
on himself and less on the teacher.
The
best antidote for a child’s unwillingness and inability to pay attention to a
task is not drugs but delayed gratification training. The individual’s simple
success in a difficult area for him is essential in beginning this process. An
authority figure begins with breaking down the task into small simple steps. As
the child’s ability to perform increases in complexity he learns the answer he
seeks will occur by first defining and observing the problem. The higher his
level of expectation for completing a task, the more the person gains patience
in searching for the answer. His willingness to accept the fact that he needs additional
time to come up with the answer is delaying the gratification of completing the
activity. Delaying immediate gratification for a greater payoff down the road
is a necessary trait of maturity.
Discerning people
cannot accept the narrative that we have a sudden explosion of defective children with an inability
to be attentive. They would be more likely to agree our lack of childrearing
training and the instant gratification of our culture are the main culprits for
this phenomenon. Attention deficit of
our children is real but the solution is not chemical, it is training the child
to carefully observe situations long enough to come up with a possible solution
and test it to see if it works.
Nudging
a student to pay attention by sugar coating a lesson is ignoring the real
issue. Students have to realize the power of applying their mental energy is
the most effective way to arrive at a solution. It will increase success in all
of life’s tasks. The more the student sees
the positive results of focusing on problem solving, the more he becomes an independent
and strong learner.
Domenick Maglio, PhD. is a columnist carried by various
newspapers, an author of several books and owner/director of Wider Horizons
School, a college prep program. Dr. Maglio is an author of weekly newspaper
articles, INVASION WITHIN and a
new just published book, entitled, IN CHARGE PARENTING In a PC World.
You can visit Dr. Maglio at www.drmaglio.blogspot.com.
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