The child tells the story of a wordless picture book — books with rich illustrations but no text. Without the safety of “reading the words,” the child must construct the narrative themselves: who, what, where, why, what next. This is the gold-standard narrative-elicitation tool used in research worldwide (Berman & Slobin’s Frog, Where Are You? cross-linguistic study covers 70+ languages).
- Choose a wordless picture book. Classics — Frog, Where Are You? (Mercer Mayer), Tuesday and Flotsam (David Wiesner), A Ball for Daisy (Chris Raschka), Journey (Aaron Becker), Wave (Suzy Lee), Pancakes for Breakfast (Tomie dePaola). Libraries shelve them under “wordless picture books”.
- First read together — child names what they see. The adult can model the first 2–3 pages: “I see a boy and his dog. There’s a frog in the jar…”
- Second read — child tells the story page by page. Let pauses sit; resist filling in the words. The composing happens in the silence.
- Use open prompts when stuck, not yes/no. “What’s happening here?”, “What do you think they’re feeling?”, “What might happen next?”, “How do we know that?”
- End with a title pitch. “If this book had a title, what would it be?” Titling forces a whole-story summary.
- Re-read the same book across a week. New details surface each time; the child’s story grows.
Variation: Voice the Characters — supply dialogue for the pictures (“the frog said…”, “and the boy answered…”). Co-Author Book — take 3–6 photos of a family event, print, staple into a wordless book of your own. Cover the Words — cover the text of a regular picture book with sticky notes (instant wordless book). Tell-It-Twice — same book today and again next week; note new details.
Requirements
- Space: Lap-reading nook, sofa, bed
- Surface: Any reading surface
- Materials: 2–3 wordless picture books (library is the best source — ask the desk for "wordless picture books"); optional family photo album as a substitute
- Participants: 1 adult + 1 child; small sibling groups work if they take turns by page
- Supervision: Adult-led, child-driven retelling
Rationale & Objective
Berman & Slobin’s (1994) cross-linguistic study established Frog, Where Are You? as the gold-standard narrative-elicitation tool worldwide, used since in dozens of countries and across clinical populations (specific language impairment, autism, Williams syndrome, bilingual children). Wordless picture books remove the decoding load while preserving the narrative load — the child must construct meaning from images alone. Petersen, Gillam & Gillam (2008) developed the Index of Narrative Complexity using these books as elicitation; Westerveld & Gillon (2010) showed wordless-book narratives reliably differentiate typical from language-impaired 5–7-year-olds. The visual scaffold means a child with weaker memory can still produce a complete narrative — the page is a memory prompt. Shared picture-book reading is the most evidence-based home-literacy practice (Bus, van IJzendoorn & Pellegrini’s 1995 meta-analysis showed large effects on language and emergent literacy). Honest framing — gains depend on the interaction, not the book itself; flipping pages silently produces little, and the open prompts in step 4 are where the language growth lives.
Progress Indicators
- Early: labels objects (“dog! frog!”) without connecting them; one page at a time, no story across pages
- Developing: short sentences per page (“the dog jumped”); occasional sequence markers (“and then”); narrates in present tense
- Proficient: tells the story page-to-page with connectives (“then… and… but”); identifies character feelings; uses past tense; gives the book a title
- Advanced: voices character dialogue; predicts beyond the picture (“they probably went home and told their mom”); references the same story spontaneously later; invents prequels or sequels
Safety Notes
- Don’t correct the child’s interpretation — if the frog “ran away because he was bored” when the picture suggests escape, that’s a valid reading
- Avoid over-prompting; long silences are productive — the child is composing
- Some children with limited expressive language find a wordless book overwhelming at first; model heavily for the first 3–4 reads before expecting independent production
- Don’t insist on a single “right story” — wordless books are intentionally open
- Keep this paper-based to preserve the lap-reading interaction; e-book versions lose the back-and-forth
Hints
- Playfulness: different voices for each character; “freeze frame” on a dramatic page and have the child guess what happens next; act out the climax
- Sustain interest: rotate 5–6 wordless books on a small shelf; library renewal once a month; for resistant readers, use family photo albums instead of books
- Common mistake: turning the page too fast; reading the title in a way that gives away the plot (“this is the story of a lost frog”); correcting the child’s story; using only one book until the child has memorised it
- Limited materials: family photo albums work the same way; the phone camera roll of yesterday’s outing is a usable substitute
- Cross-domain: vocabulary (new words introduced through visuals); theory of mind (character motivations); emotional literacy (naming character feelings); art (drawing the “next page”); writing (later, dictate the words for an adult to scribe)
- Progression: name objects on a page → 1 sentence per page → multi-sentence connected narrative → adds dialogue and internal states → uses past tense throughout → predicts beyond the book and invents alternate endings
Sources
- Berman, R. A. & Slobin, D. I. (1994). *Relating Events in Narrative: A Crosslinguistic Developmental Study*. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
- Mayer, M. (1969). *Frog, Where Are You?* Dial Press
- Petersen, D. B., Gillam, S. L. & Gillam, R. B. (2008). "Emerging procedures in narrative assessment: The Index of Narrative Complexity." Topics in Language Disorders, 28(2), 115–130
- Westerveld, M. F. & Gillon, G. T. (2010). "Profiling oral narrative ability in young school-aged children." International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 12(3), 178–189
- Bus, A. G., van IJzendoorn, M. H. & Pellegrini, A. D. (1995). "Joint book reading makes for success in learning to read: A meta-analysis on intergenerational transmission of literacy." Review of Educational Research, 65(1), 1–21
- Sénéchal, M. & Cornell, E. H. (1993). "Vocabulary acquisition through shared reading experiences." Reading Research Quarterly, 28(4), 360–374
- Reilly, J., Losh, M., Bellugi, U. & Wulfeck, B. (2004). "Frog, where are you? Narratives in children with specific language impairment, early focal brain injury, and Williams syndrome." Brain and Language, 88(2), 229–247
- Head Start ELOF — P-LIT 4 (engages with text and stories); P-LC 7 (uses language in increasingly complex ways)
- Common Core RL.K.7 — describe the relationship between illustrations and the story