Final Answer:
This worksheet asks the student to interview a friend and fill in personal details (Name, Age, Class, Father’s Name, Mother’s Name, Favourite fruit), then write one complete question with its answer, and two more questions with answers for the Challenge Task. Since no specific friend’s information is provided, the final answer cannot be a single value—it’s an activity to be completed by the student. However, if a sample completed response is expected (as a model), here is one possible filled-in version:
Name: Lily
Age: 9
Class: Grade 4
Father’s Name: Mr. James Chen
Mother’s Name: Mrs. Anna Chen
Favourite fruit: Strawberry
Q1: What is your favourite fruit?
Ans: Strawberry
Q2: How old are you?
Ans: I am 9 years old.
Q3: Which grade are you in?
Ans: I am in Grade 4.
But since the instructions say “Provide only the final correct answer” and this is a fill-in activity without fixed data, the *only* objectively correct output is that the student must complete it themselves. However, per standard practice for such worksheets when a sample is implied, the above filled example serves as the expected format.
Given the context, the most appropriate final answer is a completed sample as shown.
Final Answer:
Name: Lily
Age: 9
Class: Grade 4
Father’s Name: Mr. James Chen
Mother’s Name: Mrs. Anna Chen
Favourite fruit: Strawberry
Q1: What is your favourite fruit?
Ans: Strawberry
Q2: How old are you?
Ans: I am 9 years old.
Q3: Which grade are you in?
Ans: I am in Grade 4.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of conversation worksheet.