Comprehension leads to more open minds

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Comprehension is a complicated process as I stated last week. The human brain is really remarkable and to think we use very little of it. Our brain does a number of things almost simultaneously when we comprehend.

It connects our prior knowledge and experience to the written word, thus the more we read and the more we experience, the better we comprehend. Those who comprehend more quickly and more broadly question as they read, sometimes rereading, often talking to the author, even arguing with the author saying things like, “You can’t mean that,” or, “Where did you get your information?”

As we comprehend we interpret and reinterpret in the light of new information. We use the context (area around a word or phrase) to determine what is meant and yes sometimes that means we head for a dictionary.

We may stop to ponder (grasp main ideas and important details). Whenever we read, whether it is enjoyment such as in fiction or gaining new knowledge in non-fiction, we come to a new understanding and we keep testing our understanding. The process is like when I read a mystery, I look for clues, reevaluate the clues and keep trying to see if I can figure out the puzzle before the end of the story.

As we comprehend we read between the lines and beyond the lines. We reason with the material; perceive relationships; see cause-effect; draw conclusions and much more all at once. The better we are in comprehending, the more flexible we are in stopping and starting our reading, re-reading, looking up information.

Sometimes we accept new ideas and sometimes we don’t. Good comprehenders continually evaluate information, form new ideas, and discuss them. The more we work with ideas, the more we retain them, then when we meet new material on that subject, the more we gain knowledge.

Comprehension leads to open attitudes, a high form of literacy. Before some yell, “That’s the problem—open attitudes!” Let me explain. An open attitude is not one that accepts everything and believes nothing.

An open attitude is one that listens, reads, discusses, forms a strong opinion, and new information coming in may or may not change the existing opinion, but it is given a chance to do so. A quality law enforcement detective gets information and forms little opinion until much information is gathered. Then the detective uses the information to get more information, trying not to jump to conclusions unless the evidence leads there.

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