Answering Story Questions
Good readers ask questions! Learn to use the 5 W's - Who, What, Where, When, and Why - to understand and remember stories better.
Asking Questions About Stories
Questions Help Us Understand!
When we read or listen to a story, we can ask questions to help us understand it better. The best questions start with special words called the 5 W's!
Meet the 5 W's
These special question words help us learn everything about a story:
The 5 W Questions Explained
Who is in the story?
This question asks about the characters - the people or animals in the story.
What happened in the story?
This question asks about actions and events - the things that happen.
Where did it happen?
This question asks about places - where things take place in the story.
When did it happen?
This question asks about time - morning, night, yesterday, or seasons.
Why did it happen?
This question asks about reasons - why characters do things.
The 5 W's Song (Sing to the tune of "Twinkle Twinkle")
Why is how we ask again!
Who are the friends inside the book?
What did they do? Let's take a look!
Where and When did it take place?
Why did they smile upon their face?
Story Time: The Little Red Bird
Let's read a story together, then answer some questions about it!
The Little Red Bird
One sunny morning, a little red bird named Ruby woke up in her nest high up in a big oak tree.
"I'm hungry!" said Ruby. She flew down to the garden to find some seeds for breakfast.
In the garden, Ruby met a friendly squirrel named Sam. "Good morning, Ruby!" said Sam. "Would you like some of my acorns?"
"Thank you, Sam!" said Ruby. "But birds like seeds better than acorns." Ruby found lots of yummy sunflower seeds and ate until her tummy was full.
Then Ruby flew back to her nest and sang a happy song. She was thankful for her friend Sam and her delicious breakfast!
Story Questions
Now let's answer questions about "The Little Red Bird." Think carefully about the story!
WHO Who is the main character in the story?
WHERE Where did Ruby live?
WHEN When did Ruby wake up?
WHAT What did Ruby eat for breakfast?
WHY Why did Ruby fly to the garden?
WHO Who did Ruby meet in the garden?
Practice: Identify the Question Type
What kind of question is being asked? Click on WHO, WHAT, WHERE, WHEN, or WHY!
"Where did the princess live?"
"Who helped the farmer?"
"What did the boy find in the box?"
"When did the party start?"
"Why was the puppy sad?"
More Practice Stories
Read each mini-story and answer the question!
Mini Story 1
WHERE Where did Lily fly to?
Mini Story 2
WHAT What was Max looking for?
Mini Story 3
WHO Who read a story to Emma?
Fun Activities
Activity 1: Question Time Game
Play this game with a partner or grown-up after reading any story!
- One person asks a WHO question about the story
- The other person answers it
- Take turns asking WHAT, WHERE, WHEN, and WHY questions
- See if you can ask all 5 types of questions!
Activity 2: Question Detective
Become a question detective!
- Listen to your teacher or parent read a short story
- When the story is done, close your eyes and think
- Try to remember: WHO was in the story? WHAT did they do?
- Share your answers and check if you were right!
Activity 3: Make Your Own Questions
Look at a picture book and make up questions!
- Point to a character and ask "WHO is this?"
- Point to a place and ask "WHERE are they?"
- Point to an action and ask "WHAT are they doing?"
- Ask your grown-up to answer your questions!
Build a Question!
Click on a question word to see what kind of question you can make:
Check Your Understanding
What do the 5 W's stand for?
Which question word asks about PLACES?
Which question word asks about PEOPLE or ANIMALS?
What We Learned
5 W Questions
Who, What, Where, When, Why help us understand stories.
WHO
Asks about the people or animals in the story.
WHAT
Asks about what happened in the story.
WHERE
Asks about the places in the story.
WHEN
Asks about the time things happened.
WHY
Asks about the reasons things happened.
Next Steps
- Practice asking 5 W questions with every story you hear
- Play the Question Game with family and friends
- Try to answer questions before looking at the answers
- When you're ready, move on to the next lesson on letter formation!