Improve reading fluency! Have students fill in the blank with the correct sight word to complete sentences. Sight words are often tricky to decode - they don't follow phonics or spelling rules. To read smoothly, young learners must know them by memory. Use this printable and help kids master their sight words!
Help your child conquer their spelling confusion with this free downloadable worksheet! Kids will have fun helping the baby kangaroos hop to the finish line by finding past tense words with double letters. Trace a line to guide them back home!
Go over the exercise with your students. Ask them to read the sentences and explain what they mean. Check the pictures that correspond to the sentences. For example, what does "My dad likes to fish" mean? Test their understanding with the worksheet.
Help your kids differentiate between words and letters. If they can recite their alphabets and identify common words, this tracing sheet will be a breeze. Have them trace on the dotted lines to place the letters in the red bag with the kitten, and the words in the blue bag with the monkey.
This worksheet can help your children become better readers. By now, you should have an idea of their reading level. Read the incomplete sentences aloud and point to the missing piece. Have your students pick the correct word they think best fits the sentence out of the options given.
It's hard to keep track of all compound words! Help your child find sun-words with this fun worksheet featuring Aladdin! Your child will enjoy helping Aladdin find his way by finding the right words. It's a great way to learn compound words.
Verbs are action words. Examples: run, play, talk. Show your child this tracing sheet for them to learn about verbs. Ask them to trace the dotted lines from the spider to the words that are verbs. These words are what the spider can do.
Explain to your kids the difference between present and past tense verbs. Give examples and explain how adding '-ing' to the end of a verb changes it to past tense. Ask them to draw a line on the worksheet to the correct answer for the example 'jump'.
Help your students figure out the plural nouns in Lilliana's checklist. Look at the six objects in this PDF and add 's' to the nouns to make them plural. Show students how words can be tricky and explain how adding an 's' often changes the noun to its plural form.
Are your kids struggling with tenses? Use this worksheet to help them. See what they know by asking them to add '-ed' to the end of 'mix'. Guide them through the tracing sheet as they look for the correct answer.
This fun word search worksheet helps kids practice reading irregular words and build their sight word banks. They'll also get practice with visual discrimination and fine motor skills as they hunt down the words.
Explain to your kids what an adverb is - a word which adds meaning to a verb - and provide simple examples. Ask them if they can also give examples. Now, help them circle adverbs which tell the time when an action occurred in this worksheet.
Give kids common examples of suffixes and prefixes, such as "un-," "unhappy," "ness," "happyness." Ask them to match each word in the word recognition exercise to the correct suffix or prefix. Test phonetic understanding by having them circle the long vowel sounds.
Help your child learn to spell and write with this fun car-themed worksheet! Read the words in the center of each car and review their past tense versions in the smoke. Have your learner trace the line from each car to the correctly spelled word – and don't forget to drop the 'e' before adding an -ed ending!
Kids will have fun with the scrambled sentences worksheet: draw lines to make complete sentences. As the sentence grows, they'll learn sentence structure and word order. Easy instructions included!
This worksheet helps children learn about prefixes by matching pictures and base words with the correct prefix. Learning these prefixes and their meanings is essential for reading and vocabulary comprehension. Use this free download to check your students' understanding.
Help your child get a jumpstart on reading with sight words! Print out this fun worksheet and get your child to read the sentence. Point out the word "and", then color the word and enjoy the rest of the scene! It's a great way to introduce sight words and get their early reading skills going!
Schoolwork might not be fun, but it is important for your kid to learn. Writing and reading can be tough, but with guidance and a good worksheet they can learn verb use. Give examples, then use this colorful PDF to help them circle the verbs. It's a great way to let them do their own homework.
Does your kid know tenses? Listen to see if they are using words correctly. With this worksheet, your kids will learn to use the appropriate past tense forms. Ask them which letters added to words make the action past. Help them check the answers.