Activity
Wonder Questions Read-Aloud
During an interactive read-aloud, children answer who-what-where questions and make predictions, then ask their own.
Ages 36–66 months
Supports this milestone
- asks and answers questions about a book that was read aloud. — Head Start ELOF
Materials
- A picture book children have not heard before
- A simple "I wonder" prompt card or a wondering puppet
Steps
- Before reading, look at the cover and ask what the children think the story will be about.
- Pause at a key page and ask a detail question, such as who, what, where, or when.
- Pause before a turning point and ask: "What do you think will happen next, and why?"
- Ask an inferential question about how a character might be feeling and why.
- At the end, invite each child to ask one of their own wonder questions about the story.
Variations
- Use the wondering puppet to "ask" the questions and have children answer it.
- Reread the book and let children predict together before each page turn.
Differentiation
- For younger children, offer two picture choices to point to as an answer.
- For older children, ask them to support an answer with a clue from the story.
Accessibility
- Allow answers by pointing to illustrations or choosing between picture options.
- Give extra wait time and rephrase questions for children developing expressive language.
Safety
- Keep the group seated comfortably with room to see, avoiding crowding.
Practices these skills
Evidence
- Head Start Early Learning Outcomes Framework (ELOF) — U.S. Office of Head Start · 2015 · U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
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