Skip to the main content
Perfection Learning

AP English

Help ALL your students achieve AP success with our coursebooks designed by leading experts.

AP & Honors Science

Guide students through real-world application of science concepts with Wiley’s advanced programs.

AP Social Studies

Discover a variety of accessible yet rigorous programs designed to align with AP social studies courses.

AP Computer Science

Prepare students for success on the AP Computer Science A exam.

AP & Honors Mathematics

Explore Wiley titles to support both AP and Honors mathematics instruction.

Literacy Skills & Intensive Reading

Connections: Reading – Grades 6–12

Empower student success with a proven intensive reading program that develops strong reading skills in striving readers.

Drama, Speech & Debate

Basic Drama Projects 10th Edition

Build students’ confidence and competence with comprehensive, project-based theatre instruction.

Literature

Connections: Literature

Support learners as they study dynamic, relevant texts and bring the richness of diverse voices to students through literature.

Middle School Preview | Shop
High School Preview | Shop
 

Literature & Thought

Develop critical thinking, reading, and writing across literacy themes, genres, historical eras, and current events.

Language Arts

Vocabu-Lit® – Grades 6–12

Help students build word power using high-quality contemporary and classic literature, nonfiction, essays, and more.

 

Connections: Writing & Language

Help students develop grammar, usage, mechanics, vocabulary, spelling, and writing and editing skills.

Reading/English Language Arts

Measuring Up to the English Language Arts Standards

Incorporate standards-driven teaching strategies to complement your ELA curriculum.

English Language Learners

Measuring Up for English Language Learners

Incorporate research-based best practices for ELLs with an approach that includes a focus on language acquisition strategies.

Mathematics

Measuring Up to the Mathematics Standards

Incorporate standards-driven teaching strategies to complement your mathematics curriculum.

Foundations

Measuring Up Foundations

Help students master foundational math skills that are critical for students to find academic success.

Reading Preview | Shop
Mathematics Preview | Shop

Science

Measuring Up to the Next Generation Science Standards

Give students comprehensive NGSS coverage while targeting instruction and providing rigorous standards practice.

Assessment

Measuring Up Live

Deliver innovative assessment and practice technology designed to offer data-driven instructional support.

World Languages

Social Studies

Science

Turtleback

Reinforced bindings of classroom novels and nonfiction for maximum durability with a lifetime guarantee.

SAT Prep

SAT Prep

Financial Literacy

Introduction to Personal Finance

Culinary Arts

Professional Cooking

Professional Baking

Welcome.

For a better website experience, please confirm you are in:

2 min read

Close Reading Doesn’t Have to Be Complicated—10-Minute Strategies for Busy Weeks

Close Reading Doesn’t Have to Be Complicated—10-Minute Strategies for Busy Weeks

When the calendar gets crowded with winter concerts, makeup quizzes, assemblies, and general mid-year chaos, the idea of doing a full close-reading lesson can feel impossible. But here’s the truth: close reading doesn’t have to be a 45-minute, multi-step deep dive. With the right strategies, you can build essential reading habits in just ten minutes a day—no giant prep load required.

These quick routines help students slow down, notice more, and strengthen the analytical muscles they’ll need for upcoming assessments and high-stakes testing, all without derailing your already-packed week.

Below are 10-minute close-reading strategies you can plug into any text—fiction, nonfiction, poetry, or excerpts from your curriculum.

1. The 10-Minute “First Line Focus”

Students read only the first paragraph or stanza and answer two questions:

  • What do you notice about the writer’s choices?

  • What expectations or predictions do these choices create?

This tiny anchor forces students to observe tone, structure, and word choice from the very start.

2. Micro-Annotating With a Purpose

Instead of full-page annotations, assign a single focus lens:

  • Character motivation

  • Central idea

  • Craft move (imagery, syntax, repetition)

Students underline or highlight just three moments tied to the lens and jot a four-word margin note. Fast. Focused. High-yield.

3. One Golden Sentence

Students choose one sentence from the passage they believe is the most important and briefly explain:

  • Why did the author include it?

  • How does it shape meaning or structure?

This teaches students to prioritize significance rather than paraphrase everything.

4. The 3-Word Summary Challenge

After reading a short excerpt, students summarize it in three words—then justify their choices in one sentence.
This forces precision, inferencing, and synthesis.

5. Quick Craft Hunt

Give students 10 minutes to find:

  • One example of diction

  • One example of syntax

  • One figurative language move

Then they explain what each does, not just identify it.
Perfect for building analysis muscles without a full lesson.

6. “What Surprised You?” Sticky Note Protocol

Students read for just a few minutes, then write down:

  • Something that surprised them

  • A question it raised

  • A small inference

This routine turns confusion into curiosity—an essential close-reading mindset.

7. Mini-Passage, Big Thinking

Choose a 3–5 sentence micro-excerpt from your anchor text. Students:

  1. Read it twice.

  2. Underline the most vivid phrase.

  3. Write one analytical sentence starting with:
    “The author emphasizes…”

Even with a tiny excerpt, students can practice deep analysis.

8. The 30-Second Vocabulary Deep Dive

Pick one rich vocabulary word from the text.
Students:

  • Define it using context clues

  • Discuss how its connotations affect tone or characterization

Small move, big payoff for reading comprehension.

9. Quick Compare: Text-to-Text or Text-to-Theme

Provide a short quote or sentence from another work or theme. Students answer:

  • How does this passage connect or contrast?

This strengthens thematic thinking and synthesis—key for ELA assessments and AP-level work.

10. One-Minute Exit Analysis

At the end of class, ask students to write one sentence completing:
“Today I realized that the author…”

This builds metacognition and reinforces close-reading habits over time.

Why These Micro-Routines Matter

Short, intentional close-reading bursts:

  • Build reading stamina

  • Reinforce analytical thinking

  • Support students who need structured practice

  • Keep ELA instruction consistent even during hectic weeks

  • Reduce teacher prep without sacrificing rigor

Most importantly, they help students internalize the idea that close reading is not a chore—it’s a way of thinking, noticing, and making meaning.

Final Thoughts

You don’t need a full period to teach students how to read closely. With these 10-minute routines, you can weave powerful, standards-aligned reading practice into your packed schedule while keeping students engaged and confident.

Reading Anxiety is a Symptom, Not a Cause

Reading Anxiety is a Symptom, Not a Cause

If you've ever worked with students who struggle with reading—or experienced that struggle yourself—you’ve likely seen it firsthand: the hesitation,...

Read More
ELA Skills Depend on the Development of Cognitive Processes

ELA Skills Depend on the Development of Cognitive Processes

The goals of ELA instruction in middle and high school range from developing basic reading comprehension and writing skills to reading and writing...

Read More
Using Immersive Reader as Part of a Close Reading Routine

Using Immersive Reader as Part of a Close Reading Routine

One of the key shifts in English Language Arts classrooms is the move for students to engage routinely with complex text. To prepare students for the...

Read More
How Schools are Killing the Love of Reading

How Schools are Killing the Love of Reading

Ask a teenager how they feel about reading, and you’ll likely get an eye roll, a groan, or a halfhearted, “I don’t like books.”

Read More
Why Middle and High School Teachers Prioritize the Science of Reading

Why Middle and High School Teachers Prioritize the Science of Reading

While most early literacy development occurs in elementary school, teachers in middle and high schools continue shaping students' reading abilities,...

Read More
If You Build It, They Will Read

If You Build It, They Will Read

Last week during her first week of school, I had a conversation with a fresh-out-of-college-first-year teacher who was spending her evenings typing...

Read More
Teaching Reading When You're Not a Reading Specialist

Teaching Reading When You're Not a Reading Specialist

This webinar with Dr. Brandon Abdon, author of our AP Language and Composition and AP Literature and Composition AMSCO coursebooks, and guest ELA...

Read More
Students Who Love This Streaming Show Will Love These Books!

Students Who Love This Streaming Show Will Love These Books!

Students' favorite streaming services, movies, and video games are all packed with compelling storytelling. To get them more excited about reading, I...

Read More
Transitional Literacy and the Science of Reading in Secondary ELA

Transitional Literacy and the Science of Reading in Secondary ELA

Transitional literacy focuses on bridging the gap between basic reading skills and more advanced literacy skills necessary for success during middle...

Read More
ELA: Tweets to Check Reading Comprehension

ELA: Tweets to Check Reading Comprehension

I don’t know about you, but I hate grading reading comprehension questions. First of all, the answers usually could be “borrowed” from websites like...

Read More
Book Dating Profile

Book Dating Profile

In this activity, each student will create a "dating profile" for a book. By highlighting key characteristics of the book, students will craft...

Read More
ELA Activity: Practice Annotating Texts

ELA Activity: Practice Annotating Texts

Annotation is a life skill, especially for our college-bound students. Reading something with a purpose, a strategy to comprehend at a higher level,...

Read More