Speed Builder: Skim and Scan to Accuracy (Reading)
Master fast, accurate reading with a simple 3-pass system that turns skim and scan into reliable answers. Learn clear timing targets, how to map questions, locate proof lines, and avoid traps. Use the daily drills, one week schedule, and an error log to raise speed without losing precision. Track words per minute, location time, and accuracy rate to see steady gains.
Outcome
- Read faster without panic.
- Find answers quickly and prove them with the text.
- Lift accuracy on all IELTS question types.
The 3-Pass Method
- Pass 1: Skim for structure
Aim 60 to 90 seconds. Read title, first and last lines of each paragraph. Note topic, tone, and paragraph purpose. Mark 3 to 5 anchor words per paragraph such as names, dates, numbers, rare nouns. - Pass 2: Question map
Sort questions by type and expected order. Underline keywords and write 1 to 3 paraphrases for each. Predict where in the passage they live using your anchors. - Pass 3: Scan and confirm
Jump to likely zones. Scan for anchors and synonyms. Read 1 to 2 lines above and below. Lock the answer only after a proof line confirms meaning.
Timing Benchmarks
- Full test: 60 minutes.
- Suggested split in practice: Passage 1 = 15 to 18 min, Passage 2 = 20 to 22 min, Passage 3 = 22 to 25 min.
- Target locate time per question: 15 to 25 seconds before detailed reading.
Drill Menu
- Skim sprints: Skim 3 short articles. Write one line per paragraph on purpose.
- Anchor hunts: Pick 20 items to find fast such as dates or names. Record average locate time.
- Paraphrase bank: Build pairs like cause→reason, rise→increase, hardly→rarely. Add 10 daily.
- Negation guard: Practice spotting only, except, rarely, none, all, most.
- Number sense: Train quick checks on ranges, percentages, and approximations.
Question Type Playbook
- True False Not Given / Yes No Not Given
Find the proof line. If the text clearly agrees, mark True or Yes. If it clearly contradicts, mark False or No. If the topic appears but the claim is not stated, mark Not Given. Do not use outside knowledge. - Matching headings
Choose the main idea of the whole paragraph. Check first line for topic and last line for result. Ignore repeated keywords that only show examples. - Multiple choice
Predict your answer before reading options. Eliminate extreme or off-topic choices. Match meaning, not words. - Summary, table, flowchart completion
Read the sentence around the gap. Predict word class. Scan for a matching idea. Respect word limits and grammar. - Matching names or details
Scan for capitals, years, symbols. Confirm with 1 to 2 lines of context.
Accuracy Locks
Use this checklist for every answer:
- Location: I found the exact line.
- Paraphrase: My option equals the line in meaning.
- Scope: Quantifiers and time reference match.
- Grammar fit: The word or phrase fits the sentence.
- No assumption: I did not rely on background knowledge.
Error Log Template
Write after each practice:
- Q no
- Type
- Your answer vs correct
- Cause label: wrong location, missed negation, keyword trap, time rush
- Fix action: new paraphrase, slow down on quantifiers, refine anchors
One Week Builder Plan
- Day 1: Baseline mini test. Record WPM, accuracy, average locate time.
- Day 2: Skim sprints + heading tasks.
- Day 3: Anchor hunts + detail questions.
- Day 4: TFNG and YNNG set with negation guard.
- Day 5: Mixed 20 questions under strict timing.
- Day 6: Full passage with 3-pass method.
- Day 7: Review error log and update paraphrase bank.
Metrics That Matter
- WPM: Words per minute on first skim.
- Locate time: Seconds to reach the proof line.
- Accuracy rate: Correct answers divided by total.
- Error pattern: Top two causes this week and your planned fix.
Lightweight Tools
- Timer on phone.
- Highlighter with a 5 mark limit per paragraph.
- A4 sheet for the question map and error log.
Quick Wins
- Read the question stem before options.
- When stuck for 20 seconds, switch question and return later.
- Trust the text. If proof is weak, it is Not Given or the wrong spot.
Use this system daily. Speed comes from structure, and accuracy comes from proof.