Next Step Blog - Resources for Educators

Short Story Activities | Next Step

Written by Clair Antoon-Newton | Feb 24, 2026 4:11:20 PM

In my district, every nine weeks we ask our students at all grade levels to read a work independently and then demonstrate their knowledge of that text. I found that in those first few weeks of school, my AP Literature students struggled to apply the concepts we were learning in class to novels and plays without instructional support. In addition, these early assignments also took away the support my students needed most– one another. Reading, while a solitary activity, is also inherently social. My favorite works of literature are those I have had the chance to explore in discussion with others.

However, just because students struggle to read independently doesn’t mean we should do it less frequently; if anything, we should ask them to read independently more often. We just need to develop better scaffolds to support our students as they climb the ladder of critical thinking and literary analysis. Several years ago, I got inspired to create a Short Story Literary Circles project to help my students connect and to reinforce the skills we were working on together. I laid out scavenged white table cloths, some gold platters, and buy-one-get-one-a-penny roses from the local grocery store. I made a menu, put on an apron, and hosted a short story tasting in Cafe 2416– a.k.a–my classroom.

Now, some years I do not have the time to create a fine dining experience, but I have found that regardless of the ambiance, students enjoy the chance to sample some short stories before selecting one to study more closely. It is not uncommon for students to ask after class if we will do this again because they just cannot decide what to order!

In my own classroom, this work happens following the CED Unit 1: Short Fiction I, and students complete the reading and annotations independently. As we continue into Unit 2: Poetry I, I set aside time time for students to work in literary circles once or twice a week with the expectation that they arrive ready to share their ideas and progress. I could also see these materials working as in class assignments as well. There are endless opportunities to condense or expand this concept. You know what is best for your students!

All of the students’ work is geared around addressing the final prompt:

Read the short story __________ by __________. Then write a well organized essay in which you analyze how the author uses literary techniques and devices to portray development of a main character and how that character adds to the meaning of the work as a whole.

Here is a sample schedule aligned with the included materials:

  • Week 1: Allow students to sample the stories and select one to read and annotate
  • Week 2: Quiz students over their selected story and provide time for them to discuss their stories in small groups
  • Week 3: Have students share their annotations in small groups and their insights about the character and theme charts
  • End of Week 3 or Week 4: Have students write an in-class essay or line of reasoning outline over their selected short story

Below are some materials to get you started if you would like to host your own Short Story Literary Circles:

Short Story Menu

Short Story Character & Theme Charts

Short Story Discussion Questions

Line of Reasoning Essay Outline

Chart & Outline Rubric

Please note that this unit uses the following stories: “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gillman, “To Build a Fire” by Jack London, “The Five Forty Eight” by John Cheever, “Sweat” by Zora Neal Hurston, and “Cathedral” by Raymond Carver. Feel free to adapt this project to meet your own classroom’s needs! If you use any of these materials, be sure to comment and share what works for your students.