Roald Dahl • Ages 8+ • KS2 • 45 questions

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory KS2 Quiz (With Answers)

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Q1 of 45

What is the name of the boy who wins a golden ticket in the story?

  • Augustus Gloop
  • Mike Teavee
  • Violet Beauregarde
  • Charlie Bucket

Q2 of 45

How many golden tickets were hidden inside Wonka bars?

  • 10
  • 5
  • 3
  • 7

Q3 of 45

Who runs the chocolate factory?

  • Augustus Gloop
  • Mr Bucket
  • Grandpa Joe
  • Willy Wonka

Q4 of 45

What does Charlie's father do for work?

  • He operates machinery in the local coal mine
  • He drives a delivery lorry for a supermarket chain
  • He works as a postman delivering letters in the town
  • He screws on toothpaste caps in a factory

Q5 of 45

Which golden ticket winner falls into the chocolate river?

  • Augustus Gloop
  • Mike Teavee
  • Violet Beauregarde
  • Veruca Salt

Q6 of 45

What do the Oompa Loompas originally come from?

  • Sugarshire
  • Candy Island
  • Loompaland
  • Chocolate Valley

Q7 of 45

What happens to Violet Beauregarde?

  • She becomes invisible
  • She drowns in chocolate
  • She turns into a blueberry
  • She shrinks very small

Q8 of 45

What does Veruca Salt demand from her father?

  • A chocolate bar
  • A golden ticket
  • An Oompa Loompa
  • A pony

Q9 of 45

Which grandparent accompanies Charlie to the factory?

  • Grandpa George
  • Grandma Georgina
  • Grandma Josephine
  • Grandpa Joe

Q10 of 45

What is the special room that Charlie ultimately wins?

  • The Inventing Room
  • The Television Room
  • The Nut Room
  • The Wonka Factory itself

Q11 of 45

How does Charlie find the money to buy his final Wonka bar?

  • He earns it doing jobs
  • His mother gives it to him
  • He steals it
  • He finds it in the gutter

Q12 of 45

What does Mike Teavee do inside the factory?

  • He sends himself via television
  • He falls into the fudge machine
  • He opens a forbidden door
  • He eats too much fudge

Q13 of 45

What are the Oompa Loompas always doing after each child's mishap?

  • Crying
  • Telling jokes
  • Running away
  • Singing and dancing

Q14 of 45

What type of sweets were being tested in the Inventing Room?

  • Chocolate rivers and candy floss
  • Fizzy lifting drinks only
  • Everlasting gobstoppers and three-course meal chewing gum
  • Lollipops that change flavour

Q15 of 45

What is the name of the famous TV programme that reporter Wonka refuses to allow?

  • Wonka's World
  • There is no TV programme
  • Inside the Chocolate Factory
  • The Great Wonka Show

Q16 of 45

Why does Charlie's family struggle to have enough food?

  • They have forgotten to go shopping
  • They live far from any shops
  • They are fasting for a special occasion
  • They are very poor and cannot afford more food

Q17 of 45

What do all four of Charlie's grandparents have in common?

  • They all used to work in a chocolate factory
  • They all share one bed at one end of the small house
  • They all have the same birthday
  • They all dislike Willy Wonka

Q18 of 45

Why is finding the Golden Ticket such a big deal for Charlie?

  • Chocolate is banned in his country
  • His family is too poor to buy many bars, making his chances very slim
  • He made a bet with a friend about finding one
  • He has never eaten chocolate before

Q19 of 45

How do the Oompa Loompas react after each child meets their fate?

  • They sing a song with a moral lesson about the child's bad behaviour
  • They cry and feel sorry for the child
  • They carry the child to safety
  • They ask Wonka what to do next

Q20 of 45

What happens to Augustus Gloop when he leans over the chocolate river?

  • He gets stuck on a bridge over the river
  • He falls in and is sucked up a pipe
  • He is sent home by Wonka immediately
  • He is turned into chocolate himself

Q21 of 45

What rule does Violet Beauregarde break despite being warned?

  • She touches the chocolate waterfall
  • She takes sweets from a display without asking
  • She runs in the factory
  • She chews the three-course-dinner chewing gum

Q22 of 45

Why do the squirrels throw Veruca Salt down the rubbish chute?

  • She screams too loudly and frightens them
  • The squirrels test her and decide she is a bad nut
  • She tries to steal a golden egg
  • She tries to stop them working

Q23 of 45

What does Mike Teavee do that results in him being shrunk?

  • He insists on being sent through the television like a chocolate bar
  • He breaks one of Wonka's machines
  • He tries to film inside the factory
  • He jumps into the television set

Q24 of 45

What does Wonka give Charlie at the very end of the story?

  • A lifetime supply of chocolate
  • A golden ticket to come back whenever he likes
  • A recipe book of all his secret chocolates
  • The entire chocolate factory to own and run

Q25 of 45

Why does Grandpa Joe end up going to the factory with Charlie?

  • He is the only grandparent young enough to walk
  • He wins a separate competition
  • He is Charlie's only family member who believed Charlie would find a ticket
  • He worked at the factory years ago and Wonka invited him

Q26 of 45

What is special about the fizzy lifting drinks room?

  • If you drink them you float up towards a dangerous spinning fan
  • They can only be made once a year
  • The drinks make you invisible
  • The drinks give you the ability to make chocolate appear

Q27 of 45

How does Charlie show he is different from the other children during the tour?

  • He is the only one who tries to thank Wonka
  • He helps the other children when they get into trouble
  • He is the only child who asks intelligent questions
  • He does not grab, steal or disobey

Q28 of 45

What is Wonka's reason for hiding behind a secret heir plan?

  • He wants to keep the factory safe from spies
  • He needs someone honest and loving to take over before he grows too old
  • He wants to retire to a warm country
  • He is testing which family deserves the most chocolate

Q29 of 45

What does the Bucket family eat to survive the harsh winter?

  • Cabbage soup
  • Whatever Charlie can find in the snow
  • Only bread and water
  • Leftovers from a nearby restaurant

Q30 of 45

What mood does Dahl create in the opening chapters about Charlie's home life?

  • Bleak and cold but full of warmth and love between family members
  • Funny and chaotic
  • Mysterious and unsettling
  • Exciting and adventurous

Q31 of 45

Why do you think Roald Dahl chose to make Charlie's family extremely poor? What theme does this poverty help to convey?

  • To contrast Charlie's goodness with wealth, suggesting virtue matters more than money
  • To make the story sadder
  • To show that rich people are bad
  • To explain why charlie deserved to win

Q32 of 45

Each child who visits the factory is punished for a particular character flaw. What does Violet Beauregarde's fate suggest about the vice of greed for novelty?

  • That new things are always dangerous
  • That impatience and greed transform people, making them lose their humanity
  • That chewing gum is harmful
  • That Wonka dislikes children

Q33 of 45

How does Roald Dahl use the Oompa Loompas' songs to shape the reader's moral understanding of the story?

  • They are just entertainment
  • They act as a moral chorus, directly teaching the reader and judging each child's behaviour
  • They make the factory seem scary
  • They distract from the main plot

Q34 of 45

What might the golden ticket represent symbolically for Charlie and his family?

  • An exam result
  • An opportunity to escape poverty and find hope
  • A trap set by Wonka
  • A real ticket made of gold

Q35 of 45

In what ways is Willy Wonka an ambiguous character? Is he purely kind, or is there something sinister about him?

  • He is simply lonely
  • He is deliberately sinister and cruel
  • He is ambiguous
  • He is completely kind and generous

Q36 of 45

How does Dahl use contrast between the four 'bad' children and Charlie to develop the book's central message?

  • To show that most children are naughty
  • To make the story longer
  • To make the reader dislike charlie
  • To highlight flaws in modern parenting and suggest that spoilt, selfish children will face consequences

Q37 of 45

What social commentary might Dahl be making about television through the character of Mike Teavee?

  • That television is educational
  • That technology is wonderful
  • That Mike is unlucky, and
  • That excessive screen time stunts the imagination and reduces children, metaphorically, to tiny beings

Q38 of 45

What is the significance of Wonka's decision to give Charlie the whole factory at the end?

  • He loses a bet, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • It rewards Charlie's humility, kindness and moral worth
  • He is too old to continue
  • He has no children of his own, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure

Q39 of 45

How does the setting of Charlie's cramped, cold house contrast with the factory, and what effect does this create for the reader?

  • It creates contrast that heightens the magical escape the factory represents, making the reader feel Charlie's wonder more acutely
  • It shows they are poor, and
  • It makes the factory seem dangerous
  • It is just a plot device

Q40 of 45

Veruca Salt's name is a Dahl invention. What does a 'verruca' suggest about her character?

  • That she is sporty
  • That she is physically unpleasant
  • That she is foreign
  • That she is kind but overlooked

Q41 of 45

How does Grandpa Joe's sudden energy when he hears about the factory contrast with his years of illness, and what might Dahl suggest about the power of hope?

  • That the factory has magical healing powers
  • That Grandpa Joe was pretending all along
  • That old people recover quickly
  • That hope, excitement and purpose can revive the human spirit dramatically

Q42 of 45

Why might Dahl have chosen a chocolate factory — rather than, say, a toy factory — as the setting? What does chocolate represent?

  • Because Dahl liked chocolate
  • Because it was cheaper to write about
  • The apparent depth here is illusory
  • Chocolate represents temptation, pleasure and indulgence

Q43 of 45

How does Dahl present the parents of the four children, and what commentary does this make about parenting styles?

  • The parents are the real villains
  • All parents are loving
  • The parents enable their children's worst traits, suggesting that poor parenting creates spoilt, flawed children
  • The parents are irrelevant

Q44 of 45

What might be the deeper meaning behind Wonka's invitation to only five children — rather than opening the factory to everyone?

  • He disliked crowds, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure
  • He could afford five visitors, and
  • Selection and worthiness
  • He wanted to sell more chocolate, a reading that locates the novel's meaning in its historical and personal context rather than in its literary structure

Q45 of 45

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was published in 1964. In what ways does it reflect or critique the consumer culture of its era?

  • It has no social commentary
  • It is only about children's behaviour
  • It critiques materialism, commercialism and the obsession with wealth and products by showing they corrupt childhood
  • It celebrates consumerism

All Answers

  1. Q1: Charlie Bucket
  2. Q2: 5
  3. Q3: Willy Wonka
  4. Q4: He screws on toothpaste caps in a factory
  5. Q5: Augustus Gloop
  6. Q6: Loompaland
  7. Q7: She turns into a blueberry
  8. Q8: A golden ticket
  9. Q9: Grandpa Joe
  10. Q10: The Wonka Factory itself
  11. Q11: He finds it in the gutter
  12. Q12: He sends himself via television
  13. Q13: Singing and dancing
  14. Q14: Everlasting gobstoppers and three-course meal chewing gum
  15. Q15: There is no TV programme
  16. Q16: They are very poor and cannot afford more food
  17. Q17: They all share one bed at one end of the small house
  18. Q18: His family is too poor to buy many bars, making his chances very slim
  19. Q19: They sing a song with a moral lesson about the child's bad behaviour
  20. Q20: He falls in and is sucked up a pipe
  21. Q21: She chews the three-course-dinner chewing gum
  22. Q22: The squirrels test her and decide she is a bad nut
  23. Q23: He insists on being sent through the television like a chocolate bar
  24. Q24: The entire chocolate factory to own and run
  25. Q25: He is the only grandparent young enough to walk
  26. Q26: If you drink them you float up towards a dangerous spinning fan
  27. Q27: He does not grab, steal or disobey
  28. Q28: He needs someone honest and loving to take over before he grows too old
  29. Q29: Cabbage soup
  30. Q30: Bleak and cold but full of warmth and love between family members
  31. Q31: To contrast Charlie's goodness with wealth, suggesting virtue matters more than money
  32. Q32: That impatience and greed transform people, making them lose their humanity
  33. Q33: They act as a moral chorus, directly teaching the reader and judging each child's behaviour
  34. Q34: An opportunity to escape poverty and find hope
  35. Q35: He is ambiguous
  36. Q36: To highlight flaws in modern parenting and suggest that spoilt, selfish children will face consequences
  37. Q37: That excessive screen time stunts the imagination and reduces children, metaphorically, to tiny beings
  38. Q38: It rewards Charlie's humility, kindness and moral worth
  39. Q39: It creates contrast that heightens the magical escape the factory represents, making the reader feel Charlie's wonder more acutely
  40. Q40: That she is physically unpleasant
  41. Q41: That hope, excitement and purpose can revive the human spirit dramatically
  42. Q42: Chocolate represents temptation, pleasure and indulgence
  43. Q43: The parents enable their children's worst traits, suggesting that poor parenting creates spoilt, flawed children
  44. Q44: Selection and worthiness
  45. Q45: It critiques materialism, commercialism and the obsession with wealth and products by showing they corrupt childhood
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