The Tight10 in Action: Early Wins for the Fluency Pilot
- Kate Crist
- May 14
- 4 min read
By Dr. Ali Wilson and Kate Crist

Just a few weeks into piloting the Tight10 in middle and high schools we are seeing momentum build. Teachers are telling us that this small, structured routine is delivering something they’ve been craving: a coherent, Tier 1-aligned tool that works to accelerate adolescent students’ reading skills. (If you missed our first post about the launch of this pilot, check it out here.)
The Tight10 is designed to connect research to practice in an effort to build coherence, the “secret sauce in a high quality education” (TNTP’s Instructional Coherence, 2023). The tool’s design leverages the growing evidence base indicating “trajectory-changing schools ensure that all pieces of the school’s instructional program - curriculum, materials, interventions and assessments - work together to advance the same set of grade-level expectations” (TNTP’s Opportunity Makers, 2024). This is precisely what the Tight10 does. It is a fluency routine that provides a coherent entry point into grade-level complex texts and accelerates that learning for students who need it most – all within 30 minutes a week. It’s fast. It’s focused. And most importantly, it’s fueling meaningful progress in our participating pilot schools.
Small Shifts Make a Big Impact

During Cycle A of the Tight10 pilot, teachers explored the tool in its simplest form: a 10-minute oral reading fluency routine delivered three times a week using grade-level, content-rich texts. What we heard back was both encouraging and inspiring. At our first debrief and reflection session, pilot teachers told us:
“It feels really great to have something that isn’t intricate phonics—but still supports readers. I can coach it. Teachers can do it. Finally, something we can do.”
“I already want to do a PD with my whole school next year.”
“My student with a kindergarten-level reading ability just read a course text—and loved it. It was a huge confidence boost.”
“Students genuinely enjoy the routines.”
In this feedback, we see three powerful impacts of the Tight10: 1) Teachers find the approach reasonable, 2) Students enjoy using the routine, and 3) The routine is giving students reliable access to course content. These are promising wins at the pilot’s launch. Teachers also reported that students who have historically struggled to read out loud fluently have improved. Through the repetition and modeling built into the Tight10, these students have stronger decoding, increased enunciation, and greater engagement. And, encouraging for the pilot of an unfamiliar routine, many teachers reported they could complete the routine in just ten minutes.
The Tight10 is Creating Coherence in Action

In TNTP’s study on instructional coherence, one of the biggest takeaways was that when students encounter consistent instructional practices across classrooms, they experience stronger gains. The Tight10 is designed exactly for that kind of system-wide integration; this quick routine is designed to be repeated across multiple content areas that use complex text. In our pilot, the Tight10 is being implemented in ELA, science, and social studies classrooms in various school buildings (and even a math classroom!). In each setting, the routine is providing coherence across content areas to builds familiarity, reinforce foundational skills, and connect directly to content learning. As one teacher in this Tight10 pilot put it:“It’s so doable. The instructions are clear, the detail is concrete, and it never goes over 10 minutes. I didn’t even need PD to get started.”
Culture Builders: Confidence and Kindness
Teachers in the pilot also noticed something less measurable but equally vital: classroom culture shifted. As one teacher reported, "Students have been so great at being kind and supportive reading partners.” Teachers across the pilot reported student participation increased over the course of the cycle. One student even called the experience “so good” after the first week! And, for teachers, they appreciate the opportunity to informally inventory their students’ reading skills: “If nothing else, I get to hear my kids read. And that’s everything.”
What’s Next: Building on the Foundation
Of course, not all parts of this pilot have been smooth. Some teachers in the pilot have struggled selecting a text for students to engage with repeatedly. Others have expressed concerns about uneven skill development for students at this early stage. While challenging for students and teachers, we see these struggles as points for curiosity and to lean-in on student-centered design. They have us considering how to support text selection in new ways - how might we engage students in text selection? Could we try providing a menu of texts for teachers or students to choose from? They also have us wondering about data collection in the pilot - what easy-to-implement assessments might teachers use to gauge student progress? Might student reading improve over a longer horizon? These are design questions that will support work not only in this pilot, but for the tool moving forward.
Excitingly, the pilot has also prompted teachers to ask questions focused on other points of Tight10 implementation. Such “next-level questions” include:
When and how could this be integrated across Tiers, such as in small-group or intervention?
How should the Tight10 evolve in higher grade levels?
What does the Tight10 look like as it scales across content areas in my school?
All of these questions are critical for driving a strong implementation process. They help us ground the design and use of the Tight10 in a coherent system at the secondary level that builds for equity, and focuses on high-leverage instructional practices.

As we move into Cycle B, teachers will begin layering in text-dependent comprehension tasks—connecting fluency practice more explicitly to meaning-making. We can’t wait to keep learning alongside our pilot partners. Stay tuned for updates on how Cycle B goes!
Ready to Try the Tight10? If you are interested in trying the Tight10 in your school or district, reach out. We would be delighted to help you start your own implementation process for this promising tool.
If you’re curious about fluency practice in secondary school more broadly, check out Kate’s post You Want Me to Add Fluency?!
Sources Cited:
The New Teacher Project. (2024). The Opportunity Makers: How a Diverse Group of Public Schools Helps Students Catch Up—and How Far More Can. Available at https://tntp.org/publication/the-opportunity-makers/
The New Teacher Project. (2023). Instructional Coherence: A Key to High-Quality Learning Acceleration for All Students. Available at https://tntp.org/tool/instructional-coherence-a-key-to-high-quality-learning-acceleration-for-all/
I am so excited this pilot is going on! I love the grassroots, interactive nature of it and the nature of the cycles as the participating teachers get their 'sea legs' under them and build momentum.
I'm mindful of what time in the schoolyear it is and how impressive that is for a set of teachers working with spring feverish adolescents! Kudos.