The Reading Strategies Book 2.0
Jennifer Serravallo
Research-based reading strategies and lessons for every type of reader — a go-to reference for guided reading and intervention.
View on Amazon →Master the research-backed I Do/We Do/You Do structure to deliver focused, explicit instruction that develops independent learners.
Mini-lessons are brief, focused instructional segments (typically 10–15 minutes) that teach a single, specific skill or strategy. In K-3 classrooms, mini-lessons serve as the anchor point for literacy and math instruction, establishing expectations before students move to independent or small-group work. Unlike extended lectures, mini-lessons are tightly scoped and include immediate active participation from students.
The structure matters because young learners have limited attention spans and cognitive capacity. A well-designed mini-lesson respects these developmental realities while building foundational skills. When delivered with the explicit instruction framework, mini-lessons have been shown to accelerate student learning—particularly for struggling readers and mathematicians.
This three-phase structure, rooted in gradual release of responsibility (Pearson & Gallagher, 1983), guides you from modeling to independence:
You demonstrate the skill explicitly while thinking aloud. "I'm looking at this sentence and I notice it's asking me a question. I'll read it carefully because questions need my attention. The character is asking his friend to play. Now I'm going to check if this part makes sense..." Students watch and listen without responsibility to perform.
You and students practice together. You provide scaffolding—sentence starters, charts, hints. "Let's try the next one together. What do you notice first? Turn to your partner and tell them." You prompt, guide, and fill gaps. Success here depends on your prompting skill.
Students apply the skill with minimal support. You observe and note who needs reteaching. This phase is brief (5–7 minutes) because it assesses understanding. Move students to full independence only when ready.
State the objective clearly. "Today we're learning to use commas in a list." Connect to prior learning. "Remember yesterday we learned about listing words?" Set purpose: "Good writers use commas so readers don't get confused."
Demonstrate with a real text or sentence. Think aloud every step. "First, I look for words in a list. I see: apples, oranges, and bananas. I need a comma between each item. Watch as I write the commas..." Use a document camera or board so all see.
Try a guided example together. Ask guiding questions, not yes/no questions. "What do you notice about these words? Turn to your partner. Where should the comma go?" Provide sentence stems. "I notice... I think the comma goes..."
Students try independently or in pairs. Circulate. Observe. Do not jump in to "fix." Ask, "What do you notice here?" or "Read it aloud." Collect this work for formative data. Note who understands; plan small-group reteaching.
Restate the skill. "Writers use commas to separate items in a list so it's clear." Link to application: "You'll use this when you write your shopping list story." Preview: "Tomorrow we'll use commas in sentences with introductory words."
During each phase, use quick checks: thumbs up/middle/down, finger signals (1–5), mini whiteboard responses, partner conversations. Don't wait until "You Do" to know if students understand. Adjust live if most show confusion during We Do.
A think-aloud is when you verbalize your internal reasoning process as you perform a skill. This makes invisible cognitive strategies visible to young learners. Instead of just showing the right answer, you reveal how you think.
Example (ineffective): Teacher writes "The cat is big and the dog is small." and says, "This sentence has a comma here." Students see the result, not the reasoning.
Example (effective): Teacher says, "I'm reading this sentence. The cat is big... and the dog is small. I notice there are two ideas here connected by 'and.' When ideas are connected by 'and,' I need a comma. So I write it here. Commas help the reader understand." Students hear the decision-making process.
Think-alouds work for reading comprehension, problem-solving, writing, and behavior. They say what good readers/writers/mathematicians think but don't speak aloud.
Rosenshine's Principles of Instruction (2012) align perfectly with mini-lesson design. These principles, based on decades of classroom research, ensure maximum learning:
Cognitive Load Theory (Sweller, 1988): Young learners have limited working memory. A mini-lesson on one skill with heavy modeling (I Do) reduces cognitive load. Students focus all mental resources on understanding one concept, not managing multiple new ideas simultaneously. As they gain proficiency, you reduce scaffolds (We Do to You Do), freeing cognitive capacity.
Explicit Instruction Research (Archer & Hughes, 2011): Direct, systematic instruction—where teachers model, guide, and provide feedback—produces stronger gains than discovery-based methods, especially for struggling learners. Explicit instruction is not "drill and kill"; it's focused teaching with purposeful practice.
Automaticity & Fluency (LaBerge & Samuels, 1974): Skills taught through mini-lessons (with adequate repetition and practice) become automatic, freeing cognitive resources for deeper thinking. A student who automatically recognizes sight words can focus on comprehension, not decoding.
Metacognition & Think-Alouds (Pressley, 2000): When you think aloud, you're teaching metacognitive strategies—how to think about thinking. Students internalize this process and begin using it independently. Over time, their internal dialogue sounds like your think-aloud.
The 10–15 minute guideline exists for developmental reasons. Kindergarteners and first-graders have attention spans of 5–10 minutes for direct instruction. Second and third graders can sustain 10–15 minutes, especially with active engagement.
If your mini-lesson routinely runs 20+ minutes, you're overloading it. Break it into two separate lessons on consecutive days, or identify which sections truly belong in the lesson (sometimes I Do can be shortened if students have prior knowledge).
Track your timing for a week. Note: "Monday's phonics mini-lesson was 18 minutes (too long)." Adjust by cutting "I Do" from 6 minutes to 4, or reducing the number of examples in "We Do." Your students will stay more engaged when lessons are tight and brisk.
Download templates for I Do/We Do/You Do mini-lessons and think-aloud sentence starters from the Resource Library.
Browse Free ResourcesTeacher-tested books and classroom supplies we recommend for this topic. Explore the full list on our Recommended Resources page.
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