Skill

Asks and Answers Questions About Books

Child asks and answers questions about a book read aloud, including who, what, where, and why.

Ages 36–66 months

Why it matters

Comprehension grows in the dialogue around a book. When children answer questions about details — who, what, when, where — and reach for inferential questions such as predicting what comes next or why a character feels a certain way, they move from simply hearing a story to actively making meaning from it. Asking their own questions shows they are thinking alongside the text.

Builds toward this milestone

  • asks and answers questions about a book that was read aloud. — Head Start ELOF

Explore milestones →

What mastery looks like

  • Answers basic who, what, where, and when questions about details of a story.
  • With support, answers inferential questions, such as predicting what might happen next or how a character feels.
  • Asks questions of their own about characters or events in a book.

How to observe it

  • Can the child answer specific questions about story details with information from the book?
  • With support, does the child make a reasonable prediction or infer a character's feeling?
  • Does the child ask their own questions during or after the read-aloud?

Accessibility

  • Allow answers by pointing to illustrations or choosing between picture options.
  • Give extra wait time and rephrase questions for children developing expressive language.

Activities

Evidence