Skim & Scan 101 (WPM Baseline) : (Reading)
Build fast, accurate reading with a simple system for skimming, scanning, and tracking your WPM baseline. Learn what to read and what to skip, how to locate facts in seconds, and how to raise speed without losing meaning. Includes a 3 step WPM test, progress benchmarks, mini passages with answer keys, timing plans, and error tags. Designed for premium learners who want clear structure and a unique study routine that improves quickly.
What skimming and scanning really are
- Skimming: quick read for the main idea. Focus on title, headings, first and last sentence of paragraphs, and signposts like however or therefore.
- Scanning: targeted search for a detail such as a date, name, number, or keyword phrase. Your eyes jump directly to anchors, not every line.
Your WPM baseline in 3 steps
- Pick a 400 to 600 word article on a neutral topic.
- Read for gist for exactly 1 minute. Stop and mark the last word seen.
- Count words to that mark and compute: WPM = words read ÷ minutes.
Add a quick 3 question gist quiz. If you score under 2 out of 3, keep this as a draft WPM and repeat tomorrow.
Benchmarks for IELTS prep
- Starter: 160 to 220 WPM with 70 to 80 percent gist accuracy
- Target: 250 to 300 WPM with 80 to 90 percent gist accuracy
Skimming method: 90 second pass
- Title and intro: ask what is the topic and purpose.
- First sentences of each paragraph: write a 3 to 6 word gist note.
- Signposts: mark contrast, cause, sequence.
- Final sentence or conclusion: capture the takeaway.
Gist note examples
- Old method fails from cost
- New model saves energy
- Study limits not measured
Scanning method: lock on anchors
- Names: capital letters, initials, titles
- Numbers: years, percentages, amounts, ranges
- Format cues: italics, quotes, brackets
- Unique terms: technical nouns, hyphenated compounds
Build a keyword set from the question, add 2 synonyms, then jump paragraph by paragraph until an anchor appears. Read 2 lines around it for meaning.
Mini passage and drills
Passage (excerpt)
Para 1: The city tested night buses to reduce late taxi demand.
Para 2: A pilot route ran for eight weeks and carried 1,200 riders.
Para 3: Costs fell after drivers adopted shared charging points.
Para 4: Officials plan a larger trial during festival season.
Skim task
Write one gist note per paragraph.
Sample gists
- Night buses cut taxi load
- Pilot data: 1,200 riders
- Cost drop via shared charge
- Expansion during festivals
Scan questions
A) How long did the pilot run
B) How many riders used the service
C) When is expansion planned
Keys
A) eight weeks
B) 1,200 riders
C) during festival season
Speed without loss: the 3 guardrails
- Purpose first: always know why you read this part.
- Two line confirm: after an anchor, read one line above and below.
- Shortest correct phrase: copy the minimal words that answer.
Daily speed ladder (10 minutes)
- Minute 1: Skim a 500 word text, write 4 gist notes.
- Minutes 2 to 4: Scan and answer 4 short questions.
- Minutes 5 to 6: Repeat skim faster and check if gists still hold.
- Minutes 7 to 8: WPM check on a fresh 300 word slice.
- Minutes 9 to 10: Review errors and write one fix rule.
Raising WPM safely
- Use a pen pointer: guide your eyes in smooth lines.
- Widen eye span: read 2 to 3 words per fixation, not one.
- Stop subvocalising numbers and easy phrases.
- Time micro bursts: 30 seconds fast skim, 10 seconds breathe, repeat.
Paraphrase ladders for scanning
- increase → rise → grow → climb
- reduce → cut → lower → decline
- because → due to → owing to
- shows → reveals → demonstrates
- plan → aim → intend
Error tags for review
- GD = weak gist detail
- WA = wrong anchor chosen
- HM = half match accepted
- WL = word limit broken when copying
- TM = time lost on full paragraph reading
Timing plan in the exam
- 60 to 90 s skim the passage for gist notes
- 30 to 45 s build a keyword set per question group
- 40 s average per question to scan, confirm, and copy
- Final 60 s check numbers, names, and limits
Tracking sheet template
- Date
- Text length
- WPM
- Gist score out of 3
- Questions correct out of total
- Top 2 error tags
- One fix rule for tomorrow
Build your unique study system
- Keep a gist notebook with one line per paragraph.
- Maintain an anchor bank of names, number styles, and domain nouns you keep seeing.
- Do a weekly WPM graph and stop increasing speed if accuracy drops.
- Apply order discipline: skim before scan, always.
Final advice
Skim to know the map, scan to find the house. Protect accuracy with the two line confirm and shortest correct phrase rule. Track WPM weekly, fix one error type per day, and keep sessions short and repeatable. Speed plus control wins marks.