"What is Close Reading?" || Definition and Strategies (2024)

What is Close Reading? Transcript (English and Spanish Subtitles Available in Video, Click HERE for Spanish Transcript)

By Clare Braun, Oregon State University Senior Lecturer in English

You may have encountered the term “close reading” in high school or university settings. It’s been thrown around a lot in recent years thanks to its inclusion in the Common Core Standards for K12 education in the United States. But the practice of close reading has been around a lot longer than the Common Core, and at this point the term has been used in so many different contexts that its meaning has gotten a little muddled.

So how does the Common Core’s use of “close reading” compare to a literary scholar’s use of the term?

The Common Core Standard mentions citing “specific textual evidence” to “support conclusions drawn from the text,” and this could function as a very basic definition of “close reading” in the way that scholars conceive of the term.

For scholars, “close reading” is a mode of analysis—one of many possible modes, many of which can be used in conjunction with one another—that moves a reader beyond comprehension of the text to interpretation of the text.

A lot of the time we use close reading to uncover and explore a text’s underlying ideologies—or the ideas embedded in the text’s point of view, ideas that aren’t givens (like the laws of physics) but that are culturally or socially constructed, and usually ideas that aren’t universal even within a given culture or society.

We use close reading to make new knowledge out of our interactions with a text, which is why your instructors in high school and college might ask you to use close reading to write an essay, since the United States higher education system values the production of new knowledge.

So what does it look like to “do” close reading?

When you close read a text, you’re looking at both what the text says (its content), and how the text says what it says—through imagery, figurative language, motif, and so on. You might have noticed that the Oregon State Guide to Literary Terms includes videos on imagery, figurative language, motif, and so on—most of the videos in this series employ close reading!

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"What is Close Reading?" || Definition and Strategies (2)

But how do you look at what the text says and how it says what it says?

I like to think of close reading as a process with two major steps, plus a bonus step if you’re using the process to write a paper.

The first step is to read and observe. These observations would include the “specific textual evidence” the Common Core Standards mention—concrete things you can point to in the text. Direct observations are pretty much the defining element that makes close reading close reading.

Usually, you read the text multiple times to make note of as many observations as possible. And speaking of making notes, close reading usually involves some form of notetaking, which might be annotating in the margins or collecting observations in a notebook or computer file.

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"What is Close Reading?" || Definition and Strategies (3)

The second step is to interpret what you notice. Look for patterns in your observations, and look for places where those patterns break. Look for places in the text that snagged your attention, even if at first you don’t know why. What implicit ideas are embedded in these patterns and anomalies? What is significant about your observations, and what conclusions can you draw from them?

These questions are pretty broad, but you can ask yourself more specific questions based on the particular text you’re analyzing and on the general direction of your observations.

One thing I want to clarify is that steps one and two of this process aren’t necessarily sequential, as in, “I have completed my observations and I will now interpret them.” It’s more likely that you’ll interpret as you observe, and continue to observe as you interpret.

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"What is Close Reading?" || Definition and Strategies (4)

If you’re using close reading to write a paper, the third bonus step is to corral your observations and interpretations into a cohesive argument. This may involve cutting out the observations and interpretations that aren’t relevant, and going back to the text for additional observations you can interpret for the argument you’re developing.

So, what isn’t close reading? It’s not focused just on what happened in the text—the content; that’s summary. It doesn’t speculate on the effect of the text on the reader, which is not something you can directly observe in the text. It typically doesn’t require secondary sources, though you can use close reading with other forms of analysis that do rely on secondary sources. It’s not the discovery of the one “right” answer of what a text means, because there are many ways to observe and interpret a text. But it's also not a free-for-all where any reading of a text is correct because everything is interpretation anyway.

Close reading isn’t the only way to usefully and productively engage with a text. But it is often a useful mode of analysis because it is so grounded in the text, digging deeply into its layers of meaning.

View the Full Series:

The Oregon State Guide to English Literary Terms

"What is Close Reading?" || Definition and Strategies (2024)

FAQs

"What is Close Reading?" || Definition and Strategies? ›

Close reading involves understanding what the words of a text mean, noticing patterns and structure in the text, understanding what the work means as a whole, and re-reading a work while taking notes. More specific techniques used in close reading include: Highlighting anything surprising in the text.

What is close reading simple definition? ›

Close reading is a method of literary analysis which focuses on the specific details of a passage or text in order to discern some deeper meaning present in it. The meaning derived from the close reading is the reader's interpretation of the passage or text.

What is the 3 close reads strategy? ›

As its name suggests, the Three Close Reads (3CR) method encourages students to read the text three times. The first read is just a skim; the second is informational; and the third is conceptual, encouraging students to consider how the text connects to other texts and to the big narratives of the course.

What are the 5 steps of close reading? ›

Write a Close Reading
  • Choose a passage. ...
  • Step 1: Read the passage. ...
  • Step 2: Analyze the passage. ...
  • Step 3: Develop a descriptive thesis. ...
  • Step 4: Construct an argument about the passage. ...
  • Step 5: Develop an outline based on your thesis.
Oct 2, 2023

What is the definition of during reading strategies? ›

“Before” strategies activate students' prior knowledge. and set a purpose for reading. “During” strategies help students make connections, monitor their understanding, generate questions, and stay focused. “After” strategies provide students an opportunity to summarize, question, reflect, discuss, and respond to text.

What is close reading and why is it important? ›

Close Reading is a strategy that can be used when reading challenging text. This strategy requires teachers to provide scaffolding, and create opportunities for think-alouds and rereading of text in order to help students become active readers who focus on finding text-based support for their answers.

How do you explain close reading to students? ›

Close Reading is a skill that requires students to determine purpose and notice features and language used by the author so that they can think thoughtfully and methodically about the details in the text and why they were used.

What are the 4 types of close reading? ›

89) outline four elements to support close reading:
  • repeated reading of a short text or extract.
  • annotation of the short text or extract to reflect thinking.
  • teacher's questioning to guide analysis and discussion.
  • students' extended discussion and analysis.
Apr 7, 2020

What is an example of close reading? ›

Some Examples of Close Reading. From Mary Baroch's close reading: "He chased me round and round the place, with a clasp-knife, calling me the angel of death and saying he would kill me and I couldn't come for him no more.

What does a close read look like? ›

A close reading is a very in-depth, careful analysis of a short text. This text can be a passage selected from a novel, a poem, an image, a short story, etc. The analysis looks carefully at what is happening in the short text, but isn't necessarily isolated from references outside the text.

What are the close reading steps? ›

What are the steps of close reading? Step 1 is reading and annotating the text with a focus on the main elements and important details. Step 2 is reflecting on organizational patterns and literary techniques in the text. Step 3 is reading the text again with a focus on the elements from step 2.

What is the key to close reading? ›

Close reading asks you to pay attention to the specific language choices a writer makes (lower-level below) and try to understand how those choices result in shaping the tone and mood of a text (mid-level below) as well as contribute to larger motifs and themes a text is exploring (upper-level below).

What are the three parts of close reading? ›

A common and flexible framework teachers can use to develop lessons that support the close reading of any complex text is to divide close reading into three phases: before reading, during reading, and after reading.

What is close reading definition for kids? ›

Close reading means paying close attention to a text, reading it carefully, and looking at the details of the text in order to understand its meaning. Close reading involves paying careful attention to a text's words, ideas, flow, structure, and purpose to grasp its meaning.

What is close reading for kids? ›

an instructional routine in which students are guided in their understanding of complex texts.” Basically, close reading is a component of dynamic reading instruction where students: Read strategically. Interact with the text. Reread to uncover layers of meaning that lead to deeper understanding.

What is close reading in elementary grades? ›

Put another way, close reading helps readers get from literal to inferential understanding of text. After a close reading, students should understand what the text says and understand ideas embedded in the text, like a cultural perspective or religious opinion.

Which of the following best defines close reading? ›

AI-generated answer

A close reading involves a careful and detailed analysis of a short text or excerpt, often focusing on specific elements such as language, structure, and tone.

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