Are ages and stages a questionnaire?

ASQ: accurate, reliable developmental and social-emotional screening.

Ages & Stages Questionnaires® (ASQ®) provides reliable, accurate developmental and social-emotional screening for children between birth and age 6. Drawing on parents’ expert knowledge, ASQ has been specifically designed to pinpoint developmental progress and catch delays in young children—paving the way for meaningful next steps in learning, intervention, or monitoring.

Are ages and stages a questionnaire?

Intro to ASQ-3

  • Are ages and stages a questionnaire?

    ASQ-3 has helped make our staff and our families more aware of developmentally appropriate growth and development. The resources that come with the ASQ-3 have been instrumental for parents to provide school readiness activities at home and to understand the objectives that we cover in our plans.”

    Jessica Trail, Head of Faculty & Administration, The Young School

The ASQ System

Are ages and stages a questionnaire?

Screening

ASQ®-3 and ASQ®:SE-2 questionnaires are easy for parents to complete.

Are ages and stages a questionnaire?

Online Management

Efficiently manage ASQ® data and allow parents to complete questionnaires online.

Are ages and stages a questionnaire?

Activities

Fun, age-appropriate learning activities help parents encourage their child’s development.

Are ages and stages a questionnaire?

Training

Implementation is easy with on-site training, annual seminars, and training DVDs.

Are ages and stages a questionnaire?
As an early childhood educator, you play a vital role in ensuring that every young child is screened. Start by partnering with parents to explain why developmental screening is so important, introduce ASQ, and address any concerns they might have. Once parents complete the questionnaires, ASQ makes it easy for you to score them and interpret the results. Then sit down with parents to share what the screener revealed, plan next steps, and give them tips and strategies for encouraging their child’s progress.

Learn more in the Training Portal

Resources

How ASQ-3 Works
Screening Toolkits
Communicate with parents

Are ages and stages a questionnaire?
Program administrators lay the critical groundwork for a successful screening program. Your first role is to plan your program, from determining goals to choosing your screener. Once your plan is in place, train and support your staff on every step of screening, including engaging parents, communicating results sensitively, and connecting families with community resources for referral. You’ll also want to evaluate the success of your screening program and make periodic adjustments when necessary.

Learn more in the Training Portal

Resources

How One Center Uses ASQ video
Screening Toolkits
Child Care Success Story

Are ages and stages a questionnaire?
As a home visitor who works closely with families, you’re in an ideal position to ensure that young children are screened. Partner with the families you work with to explain why developmental screening is so important, introduce ASQ, and address their concerns and questions. Once parents complete ASQ questionnaires, score them in minutes and interpret the results. Then sit down with families to share the results, plan next steps, and give them strategies for nurturing their child’s skills and development.

Learn more in the Training Portal

Resources

Screening Toolkits
Working with interpreters
Communicate with parents

Are ages and stages a questionnaire?
Because pediatricians are the professionals most likely to see a child on a regular basis, you’re in the perfect position to promote children’s healthy development and identify potential delays early. If your office doesn’t have a screening program yet, plan one with the help of the resources on this site. As parents complete ASQ through your program, your role is to score the questionnaires, interpret results, and sit down with families to share what you learned and plan next steps. In between screenings, give families learning activities and other resources to foster their child’s skills and development.

Resources

Screening Technical Assistance and Resource Center
Implementing Developmental Screening
Coding Fact Sheet

Are ages and stages a questionnaire?
You may not be a child development specialist, but you are the expert on your child—and research has shown that parents’ concerns are accurate predictors of developmental delays. Talk to an early childhood professional about the benefits of developmental screening, and complete the ASQ questionnaire that’s right for your child’s age (they’re easy to do and take just 10-15 minutes). When your child’s pediatrician or teacher shares ASQ results with you, celebrate the milestones your child has reached and ask what you can do next to support your child’s skills and healthy development.

Resources

Learn about ASQ
Free activities
CDC Milestone Tracker App 

What is the purpose of the Ages and Stages questionnaire?

Description / Purpose: ASQ-3 screens and assesses the developmental performance of children in the areas of communication, gross motor skills, fine motor skills, problem solving, and personal-social skills. It is used to identify children that would benefit from in-depth evaluation for developmental delays.

Are Ages and Stages Questionnaire free?

Confidential Online ASQ Screening Tool Easterseals offers a free, comprehensive and confidential online screening tool to help guide and keep track of your child's growth and development during these first five years.

Who created the Ages and Stages questionnaire?

The Ages and Stages Questionnaire (ASQ) is a parent-completed questionnaire that may be used as a general developmental screening tool. The ASQ was designed and developed by J. Squires and D. Bricker42, 49, 50 at the University of Oregon and can be completed by parents in 12-18 minutes.

What is the Ages and Stages Questionnaire Social Emotional?

ASQ:SE is a screening tool that identifies infants and young children whose social and emotional development requires further evaluation to determine if referral for intervention services is necessary. Eight questionnaires are available for different age groups: 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 48, and 60 months of age.