Distracted or Distracting
I was talking to one of my sons about labels and children; how so often there can be a focus on labelling a child as having this or that, when actually we want to support the areas that affect the child and create barriers to learning. This got me thinking about the children who are often said to be distracted in class, or distracting those around them. Depending on how this manifests itself, the child can be described as poorly behaved, lazy or disinterested; yet there can be so many reasons why one appears distracted, is fidgeting, often disturbing the learning of others.
A few years ago I was asked to observe a girl in Year 5 who seemed to have difficulty engaging with her lessons. Within 5 minutes of observing her I quietly asked her to turn the music down in her head so that she could hear what everyone was saying and join in. She was surprised, but nodded, and became more focused. We chatted afterwards and she asked how I knew that she was listening to imagined music. I explained that as someone who often ‘plays music’ in my head I simply recognized the signs. It transpired that she was a dancer - absolutely loved dancing. I have been privileged to have seen her in a few school talent shows and productions since and she is a beautiful dancer to watch. There were a few processing issues, a need for a coloured overlay, and a need to ensure that she was focused in class but other than that little intervention was required. Simply knowing that the teachers were aware that she often listened to imagined music, and they would remind her to lower the volume, helped her to be less distracted. It also helped that the teachers understood her, and ensured her engagement with the lesson. Giving her a fidget string - see my video blog - and ensuring there were reasons to move around the class also helped, as the dancer in her liked to be on the go.
She reminded me of a story that Ken Robinson tell s of the dancer and choreographer Gillian Lynne, who was thought to have a learning disorder when at school, but thankfully the psychologist who met with her recognised that her inability to sit still and concentrate was about her need to move and dance. We are all wired differently, yet schools often treat us as one, expecting us to sit in rows and simply focus. You can read about this in Ken Robinson’s book The Element.
I understand about being distracted. For me it stems from my childhood. I didn’t know then about my dyslexia. What I did know was that by the time I had worked out my contribution to the dinner time conversation, the topic had moved on. I now know this is to do with how I process information. The habit that developed though was one of going into my own little world inside my head. Sometimes this would be listening to music; other times I might be playing out the conversation as it would have gone had I been ready to contribute before the topic had moved on; and sometimes I simply went to an imagined world that I had created in my head. Of course, this then meant that I missed the next bit of the conversation, so back I went into my own safe little world.
Another thing that still distracts me so easily is when something, sometimes even just one word, is uttered that brings to mind an image. My thoughts then follow that strand, leading me away from the reality around me. Often I think of the bizarre, the incongruous, which then simply makes me giggle. I am an expert giggler. This is not always at an appropriate time, but people can be very forgiving, and often end up joining in. Giggling is very good for you!
At school I often appeared distracted. If we were being asked to read around the class, then the ‘distraction’ was actually me trying to work out the bit I’d have to read and then practising it until it was my turn. If I worked it out wrong I felt awful. Definitely not being naughty though, not being rude; just trying to cope in a stressful situation. I struggled to keep up in class, learning best when given time to process, try things out and talk them through – with someone who could be patient.
Another aspect of being easily distracted is that things get started, then interrupted as something else in seen and then the first task can be forgotten. An example at home might be that I’m washing up, put something in the bin, realise it needs emptying, go to empty it and pass something I was looking for earlier. I then go to put that something away, get distracted again in whatever room that might be and then forget to return to the washing up! Some would call that a ‘senior moment’ but I’ve never been any different. As a child, when asked to tidy my room, I could be up there for hours, as everything I tidied away just led me somewhere else! Knowing that, it’s easy to see how a child could be labelled as being lazy when they haven’t finished a piece of work. They may simply have been distracted by a train of thought provoked by the work they were doing.
This distraction was also seen in my original submitted thesis. When I worked on the corrections for resubmission there were things I couldn’t find in the original because they actually had never made it to the paper, and there were things that were in the thesis, but hard to find as a train of thought had redirected me. The ideas were all there in my head, and in the viva they were all aired.
This all means that we need to develop strategies and help our pupils to find ones that support them. One strategy for writing is to use headings – I used a lot in my resubmitted thesis. As the thesis was about teachers’ emotional response to inspection I was told by my 2nd supervisor that I win the prize for the most depressing headings – most in number and extremity. For children the ‘headings’ can be translated to writing frames. If we give certain pupils writing frames it can help to direct their writing and keep them on track. Another strategy for me has been my phone. I set reminders constantly, whether they be alarms to remind me of a lesson cover or emails to myself that simply consist of a word in the subject box to remind me of something to do when back at my desk. For a pupil, depending on the rules in the school about use of phones, this could be a phone or could be a note book kept on their person, so that they can draw or write a reminder. Another important thing can be to provide certain pupils opportunities to move around the classroom, or give them a doodling book. I fidget or doodle whenever I’m in a meeting and I knit or crochet when watching television, sitting still is just too hard and stops me from concentrating.
Having something with which a child can fidget, legitimately, is also a useful strategy - see the video blog about fidget strings. However it is important that teachers allow and enable the child to use given strategies. I have in the past needed to return fidget strings to pupils who'd had them taken away because they were fidgeting with them. My job was to gently support the teacher to enable the child to use the fidget string without the teacher feeling criticised or judged. A delicate task but one that often falls to SENDCOs.
So this in itself has been a bit of a ramble, but distraction is a real thing. What might look like a lack of focus – doodling, fidgeting – might actually be the very thing that is enabling the person to concentrate and remain focused.
