Skill
Provides Sufficient Detail
Child gives enough detail to get needs met and clarifies when misunderstood.
Ages 36–60 months
Why it matters
Adjusting how much information to share — and clarifying when not understood — lets a child get needs met by a range of adults and communicate effectively across settings, a key step toward independent, purposeful language use.
Builds toward this milestone
- varies the amount of information provided to meet the demands of the situation. — Head Start ELOF
What mastery looks like
- Uses language for a variety of purposes, such as requesting, explaining, or describing a problem.
- Provides enough detail for a variety of adults to understand and meet a need.
- Rephrases or adds information to clarify a word or statement when misunderstood.
How to observe it
- When the child wants something, do they give enough detail for an adult to help?
- If an adult misunderstands, does the child try again with a clearer or fuller message?
Accessibility
- Detail expressed through AAC, signs, or drawing counts fully.
- Children who are DLLs may switch between languages to provide detail; honor both.
- Give wait time and ask open prompts rather than supplying the words for the child.
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