Today, I taught my student (she is in 7th grade) the Close Reading Strategy. I am sharing my method because, sharing is caring.
- Explicitly taught the strategy first
I framed Close Reading as a tool for comprehension and vocabulary acquisition, which gives my student a clear purpose for learning it. This matters because students engage better when they understand why a strategy is useful. -
Used oral recall immediately after instruction
Asking her to repeat what she heard strengthened processing and retention. This checks listening comprehension and helps transfer information from passive hearing to active understanding. -
Moved into written articulation
Having her write her own understanding was a good practice because it:- reveals misconceptions,
- shows depth of understanding,
- strengthens metacognition,
- and reinforces academic language.
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Provided corrective feedback without replacing her thinking
Pointing out what she got right first and then strengthening incomplete ideas is how scaffolding works. Instruction is direct and I see where my student apply revision as another learning strategy. -
Used the visual after conceptual understanding began forming
I showed my student the Close Reading visual (AI assisted). The graphic came after discussion and processing, so it functioned as reinforcement and organization, not passive decoration. The visual consolidated the learning.
My student and I were able to work together following this process:
Explain --> Recall --> Rephrase --> Clarify --> Visual Reinforcement
I was also able to incorporate, although indirectly, the following skills:
- retrieval practice,
- formative assessment,
- metacognitive reflection,
- vocabulary development,
- and multimodal learning.
For a Grade 7 student moving into Grade 8, this is the kind of literacy foundation that supports:
- science readings,
- social studies texts,
- IB/MYP criterion work,
- evidence-based responses,
- and later research tasks.
For me, teaching the Close Reading strategy is not answering questions but, it is a way of thinking while reading.








