Why Can’t My Autistic Child Answer
“What Did You Eat?”
Many parents wonder why their autistic child cant answer wh questions like “what did you eat today?” — and this article explains exactly that.
Your child can speak. They can read. They understand daily instructions. But the moment you ask “what did you eat at lunch?” — the answer is either “food” or complete silence.If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. This is one of the most common — and least talked about — challenges in autism parenting. And the good news is: it is not stubbornness, not forgetting, and not a lack of effort. There is a very clear reason why this happens.
What Are WH Questions — And Why Do They Matter?
WH questions are questions that begin with What, Who, Where, When, Why, and How. For example:
- What What did you eat today? What did you do at school?
- Who Who did you play with? Who is your teacher?
- Where Where is your bag? Where did you go today?
- When When did drawing class happen? When is your birthday?
- Why Why are you crying? Why don’t you want to go?
- How How was school today? How did you feel?
For most children, answering these questions feels natural. But for many autistic children, WH questions — especially ones about past events — are genuinely difficult to process and answer.
Why Can’t Autistic Children Answer WH Questions Easily?
This is not about intelligence or memory alone. When an autistic child is asked “what did you eat?”, their brain needs to do several things at the same time:
- Step 1 — Understand the question Process what “what did you eat” is actually asking
- Step 2 — Search the memory Recall what happened during lunch — a past event
- Step 3 — Select the right information Choose the specific answer from everything they remember
- Step 4 — Convert to words Turn that memory into spoken language in real time
For autistic children, doing all four steps simultaneously — especially under the pressure of a direct question — can be genuinely overwhelming. The result is often a general answer like “I ate food” or silence.
Why Does My Child Answer Correctly Sometimes — But Not Other Times?
This is something many parents notice and find confusing. One day your child says “Rice and fish” perfectly — and the next day it’s back to “I ate food.”
This is also why some WH questions are easier than others. Questions about what is right in front of them — “what colour is this?” or “what is this?” — are much easier because the answer is visible. Questions about past events require memory retrieval, which is a separate and harder skill.
How Can Parents Help? — 4 Simple Daily Steps
🍽️ Step 1 — Meal Time Practice (2 Minutes)
Instead of jumping straight to “what did you eat?”, build up to it in small steps:
| Instead of this ❌ | Try this ✅ |
|---|---|
| “What did you eat?” | Start with: “Did you eat lunch?” → Yes/No |
| Open question immediately | Give two choices: “Rice or chapati?” |
| Repeating the question if no answer | Model the answer: “You ate rice and dal.” |
This technique is called Modeling in Speech Therapy — you provide the correct answer without pressure, so the child hears it and gradually internalises it.
📸 Step 2 — Visual Support (2 Minutes)
Take a quick photo of the meal or activity while it is happening. 10–15 minutes later, show the photo and ask: “What is this?” or “What did you eat?” Many autistic children have stronger visual memory than verbal memory — a photo gives the brain a direct reference point instead of asking it to search blindly.
🏫 Step 3 — After School Conversation (3 Minutes)
Avoid asking “what happened at school today?” — this is too broad. Instead, ask small, specific questions:
✅ “Did you finish your tiffin?”
✅ “Did you play with anyone?”
Once you get a yes, then gently follow up: “What did you play?”
📚 Step 4 — Flash Card Practice (3 Minutes)
If your child can read, food flash cards are extremely effective. After a meal, lay out 3–4 cards of foods they commonly eat and ask: “Which of these did you eat today?” This reduces the mental load — instead of searching memory freely, they just need to recognise and point.
🎁 Free Download — Food Flash Cards for Autism & Speech Therapy
85+ printable food flash cards — Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, Fruits, Snacks, Drinks & Sweets. Specially designed for Indian families. Free for all parents!
⬇️ Download Free PDF🚀 Coming Soon — My School Day Cards
A complete set of School Day Communication Cards to help your child talk about their school day — what they did, who they met, what they ate, and how they felt. Subscribe to KidsWorksheetLab to get early access!
How Do You Know If Progress Is Happening?
Keep a small notebook with a simple table like this:
| Date | Question Asked | Child’s Answer |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | What did you eat? | “Food” |
| Week 2 | What did you eat? | “Rice” |
| Week 4 | What did you eat? | “Rice and dal” |
Progress in autism is often invisible in the moment — but when you look back a few weeks later, the improvement becomes clear. From “food” to “rice” to “rice and dal” — that journey is a real and significant victory. 💛
What Does Research Say About WH Questions and Autism?
According to the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), autistic children can develop strong communication skills with the right support — but the path looks different for every child. Some children speak fluently but struggle with conversational back-and-forth and recalling past events.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) also notes that language development and social communication challenges in autism vary widely. This is why Speech Therapists frequently use visual supports, choice-based questions, and daily routine practice — because these reduce cognitive load and make communication more accessible.


