Ages and Stages: Reading MIlestones
This is a general outline of the milestones on the road to reading and the ages at which most kids reach them.

Infancy (Up to Age 1)
Kids usually begin to:
- imitate sounds they hear in language
 - respond when spoken to
 - look at pictures
 - reach for books and turn the pages with help
 - respond to stories and pictures by vocalizing and patting the pictures
 
Toddlers (Ages 1 to 3)
Kids usually begin to:
- answer questions about and identify objects in books
 - name familiar pictures
 - use pointing to identify named objects
 - pretend to read books
 - finish the sentences in books they know well
 - scribble on paper
 - know names of books and identify them by the picture on the cover
 - turn pages of board books
 - have a favorite book and request it to be read often
 
Early Preschool (Age 3)
Kids usually begin to:
- explore books independently
 - listen to longer books that are read aloud
 - retell a familiar story
 - recite the alphabet
 - begin to sing the alphabet with prompting and cues
 - make continuous symbols that resemble writing
 - imitate the action of reading a book aloud
 
Late Preschool (Age 4)
Kids usually begin to:
- recognize familiar signs and labels, especially on signs and containers
 - make up rhymes or silly phrases
 - recognize and write some of the letters of the alphabet
 - read and write their names
 - name letters or sounds that begin words
 - match some letters to their sounds
 - use familiar letters to try writing words
 
Kindergarten (Age 5)
Kids usually begin to:
- understand rhyming and play rhyming games
 - match some spoken and written words
 - understand that print is read from left to right, top to bottom
 - write some letters and numbers
 - recognize some familiar words
 - predict what will happen next in
 - a story
 - retell stories that have been read to them
 
First and Second Grades (Ages 6 to 7)
Kids usually begin to:
- read familiar stories
 - sound out or decode unfamiliar words
 - use pictures and context to figure out unfamiliar words
 - use some common punctuation and capitalization in writing
 - self-correct when they make a mistake while reading aloud
 - show comprehension of a story through drawings
 
Second and Third Grades (Ages 7 to 8)
Kids usually begin to:
- read longer books independently
 - read aloud with proper emphasis and expression
 - use context and pictures to help identify unfamiliar words
 - understand the concept of paragraphs and begin to apply it in writing
 - correctly use punctuation
 - correctly spell simple words
 - write notes, like phone messages
 - and e-mail
 - enjoy games like word searches
 - use new words, phrases, or figures of speech that they’ve heard
 - revise their own writing
 
Fourth through Eighth Grade (Ages 9 to 13)
Kids usually begin to:
- explore and understand different kinds of texts
 - understand and explore expository, narrative and persuasive texts
 - read to extract specific information, such as from a science book
 - identify parts of speech and devices, such as similes and
 - metaphors
 - correctly identify major elements of stories
 - read and write on a specific topic for fun, and understand what style is needed
 - analyze texts for meaning