Observes and Describes
Child uses the senses to notice details and describes what they observe.
Ages 24–54 months
Why it matters
Careful observation is the first step of any investigation. As children look, listen, touch, and smell, then put what they notice into words, they build the descriptive language and attention to detail that scientific inquiry depends on.
What mastery looks like
- Describes at least two properties of an object, such as color, size, shape, or texture.
- Uses more than one sense to explore something new and reports what was noticed.
How to observe it
- When given a new object, does the child explore it with several senses before describing it?
- Does the child use specific words like rough, shiny, or curved rather than only good or nice?
Accessibility
- Accept descriptions through gesture, signing, or pointing as well as spoken words.
Activities
Evidence
- Head Start Early Learning Outcomes Framework (ELOF) — U.S. Office of Head Start · 2015 · U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Early Atlas