Check your child's understanding of height with this worksheet. Ask them to sort the objects in order of size and identify the tallest and shortest member of the family in the picture. See if they can correctly arrange the items from tallest to shortest.
Diagrams can be informative but inference is key. This worksheet contains diagrams of construction worker equipment. Get your little one to use prior knowledge to work out the uses and protection of each part. Then read the sentences and check the correct answer that fills in the blanks!
Ask your students to name some of the ways a teacher helps. Then, use this worksheet to show the right ways teachers can help. Have them check the boxes of the pictures that accurately depict what a teacher does. This is a great exercise to show your students how you help them learn and contribute to their community.
Look at the pictures in this worksheet with kids. Can they tell if the actions are fair or unfair? Help them decide and circle the appropriate option. When something causes harm to one person, it is unfair; when all parties benefit, it is fair.
Explain to your child that a home is where people live. Ask if they have noticed homes of different shapes, sizes, and materials in the community. Then, look at the pictures in this worksheet and ask your child to check the ones that show places where people live.
Help your child understand the difference between a good and bad citizen. Look at the worksheet pictures and ask your child what the children are doing. Are they being good or bad citizens? Check the correct badge for each one. After this, your child should have a better idea of how to act as a good citizen.
Before starting this coloring sheet, ask your kids to name some colors they know, or point to familiar items and ask them what color they are. Check if they can correctly identify the pictures of yellow objects. Then, you can begin the worksheet.
Kids are exposed to danger near roads, so help them recognize traffic signs with this printable. It'll foster their reading comprehension and symbol recognition, while keeping them safe.
This worksheet helps kids build writing skills like good hand grasp, pencil grip and how to hold a pencil. They can trace a path for the community helper to reach the car, learning community signs and strengthening fine-motor and pre-literacy skills while they enjoy the bright, colourful pictures.
Kids love mazes! This free PDF city maze worksheet is sure to be a hit. Help your friend the taxi driver get through the maze, following traceable lines through different communities to the big city. It's a fun and challenging way to practice fine motor skills and succeed!
Cooperation is an essential component of successful teamwork - in school, in offices, with citizens. Ask your students to check the pictures in the worksheet showing citizens working together. This is what makes a good citizen: cooperation.
This PDF provides a fun way for students to learn "Hola" (Hello) in Spanish! Kids can practice fine motor and handwriting skills while they trace the letters. They'll get the hang of top-to-bottom, left-to-right patterning while they learn how to say and write in Spanish. With practice, they'll soon feel confident speaking and writing Spanish!
This worksheet helps kids identify similarities and differences between communities. It offers four pictures of different places to live; country, city, etc. Kids use picture clues to determine which one is a city and can practice their geography and map skills. It's a great way for them to learn, allowing them easy success and reinforcement.
Have your child draw a line from each of the four buildings (printout provided) to the corresponding person or object. This worksheet will help them identify people who work in a hospital, courthouse, bank and others—what they wear and what they're called.
Kids love going to the grocery store for free samples and munchies! With this grocery store sorting worksheet, they can practice sorting, problem-solving and thinking skills. Learning experiences from real life, like grocery shopping, can be brought to your child's desk for fun matching activities. Try it out and look for these items the next time you go to the store!
Boost your kids' social studies skills; use this worksheet's vivid pictures to identify things found in a town versus a city. Have them check the box for the correct answer and test their visual discrimination and knowledge.
This interactive worksheet tasks kindergarten students with identifying essential items a teacher needs in a classroom. They will be asked to circle items, helping them learn what teachers need to have in their classrooms.
Exploring different countries' music is a great way for global learners to appreciate their place in the world. This worksheet helps them match music - like Salsa and Irish Folk - to various geographic regions with colorful visuals. It boosts reading comprehension while supporting their cultural understanding.
Have your kids give you a list of things they see at school. Then, view the worksheet together. Ask them to check the boxes next to the school items. Look for objects that can be found at school and those that don't belong. This is a great way to check their knowledge of what they see at school daily, except on weekends and holidays.
Teach your kids the importance of cleanliness. Even if they resist, show them that it affects the whole community. Use this worksheet to help them understand - it has six pictures of community members doing different things. Ask them what the kids are doing, and help them tick the pictures that show respect for the community and cleanliness.
Kids can learn they're part of a global community with this fun maze worksheet. Claude needs help finding his beret, and by using the pictures children will develop their fine-motor skills. They don't even know they're learning new language words, they're just helping a friend!
Students learn about families in social studies. This worksheet helps them identify family members by looking at a picture and circling the corresponding word. To extend their learning, ask them to talk about their own family members.