Selective attention is the
ability to focus on specific objects and ignore others (p.134). It’s a skill
that enables us to “select” what we pay attention to. Selective attention is
one of the most important cognitive abilities of a successful student.
Here’s an example of
selective attention in a classroom setting.
Michelle is sitting in
perception class taught by professor Berg. The class is in the big lecture hall
with over 100 students. Professor Berg has trouble gaining control over the
class because it’s so big and the students were not interested in his lecture
today. Professor Berg begins his lecture on Visual Attention and Michelle
begins to think about what she is going to do after class. However, she catches
herself drifting. Michelle knows she needs a good grade in perception and to do
so she has to focus on the lecture.
Michelle engages her
selective attention and blocks out the noise in the lecture hall. The girls
talking, the boys whispering, the pencils falling, the student coughing, and
incoming text messages are some of the distractions that Michelle chooses not
to attend to with her focus. Michelle’s prefrontal cortex kicked into gear.
This is the area of the brain that decides what will receive attention, which
cognitive resources will be used to analyze the incoming information, and which
distractions will be ignored.
Fortunately, Michelle’s
selective attention skills are strong and she is able to focus on Professor
Berg’s lecture, ignore the distractions around her, and process the incoming
information. However, not all students are as lucky as Michelle and find it
difficult to block out distractions. Conditions like ADD or ADHD can make it
challenging for students to stay focused and block out distractions.
Selective attention is such
an important aspect to learning. As you read this post or the textbook, chances
are you engaging your selective attention.
Here’s a
youtube video where you can test your selective attention:
Selective attention is definitely a skill. It is so interesting how some people can tune everything out and focus on just one thing. Your example was very good and thorough.
ReplyDeleteBreanne Bryson