Kids must learn to identify and name fractions to solve equations. Included in this worksheet are three equations that need solving. Have your child match each point on the number line with the correct fraction and circle it. This exercise helps build their fraction skills.
It's Little Elephant's birthday! Help your students celebrate with this fun worksheet full of colors and pictures. Deciding which questions are facts and which are fiction will help them differentiate between fantasy stories and reality. Let them have fun learning why certain elements of fantasy can't be true!
Love parrots? Here's a free worksheet to help your children practice counting to six with colorful parrot representations! Kids will adore counting the parrots and checking off groups of six - and it won't even feel like math! Just a fun way to make some new and exciting friends.
Take a stroll and help your child solve math word problems with this fun printable from Kids Academy! Colorful images make the scenarios more enjoyable. Have them read the problem carefully and solve the matching equation. Check the box next to the answer to mark it as correct!
There are many people, buildings and places in our community, so it's important to have people who maintain order. It's important citizens do their part too! This worksheet will introduce kids to community helpers. Have them complete the number sentences by checking the correct box.
When we see 'more' or 'less', they usually refer to quantity. In Math, they indicate addition or subtraction. Help kids read aloud two simple word problems and figure out the correct equations for each. Check the correct equation afterwards.
Dividing is simply grouping items into equal sets. This worksheet helps kids see division problems in array form. They'll match each equation with a picture group, using the lines provided. It's a great way for beginners to understand division more concretely.
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.
Help your child learn words and opposites. Look through a worksheet with them. Ask if they can read the underlined words. Then, ask which highlighted word is the opposite of the underlined word. The answer should match the picture.
Test your child's reading skills with this fun worksheet. See how well they know one-letter, two-letter, and five-letter words. Ask your little one to read the sentences and tick the word they identify first. It's a great way to track their progress and help them become more confident readers.
Kids love the bright, vivid pics of rainforest animals in this worksheet. It fuels their interest in life science and brings joy to their learning. It encourages them to study these animals in detail.
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.
Boost your child's critical thinking and strategy skills with this fun puzzle activity. They'll use their logical thinking to plot ways to checkmate the black king, and then check their answer with the given choices. A great way to improve their skills and have a blast doing it!
Aesop's fables have clear messages, which make them memorable and loved by children and adults. Use Kids Academy's ant and grasshopper worksheet to help your child reflect on stories and discover the life lesson.
Birds have beaks to eat different types of food. Let your little nature lover explore why with this free worksheet! They'll learn about different beak shapes and match them to the food that's best for them. Be an adorable bird watcher together!
Once your kids can count, help them learn to write numbers with your guidance and patience. This worksheet is designed to speed up the process. Help them spot the 9s in the picture, then help them trace them. With your help, your kids will soon be pros at counting and writing numbers.
Does your child love Valentine's Day? Make it special with this worksheet! Kids can use their counting skills to determine if each group has an even or odd number of hearts, then trace a heart in the odd groups. Help them make it even and have fun!
Help your child become familiar with uppercase and lowercase letters. Have them look at the pictures in the worksheet and circle the lowercase letter the picture starts with. For example: which one is the lowercase "i", the capital "I" or the small "i"?
Explain to your kids what herbivores are: animals that survive on plants and grass. Examples include cows, rabbits, and deer. Ask them to identify the herbivores in the pictures and check them off.
Want to check your child's vocabulary? This worksheet has kids identify objects from school through picture clues. It reinforces reading and fine motor skills, while providing an assessment of their reading growth and needs.
If your child has seen a ramp, they'll find this worksheet easy. A ramp is sloped for objects to move quickly downwards. The printout has images of objects on different ramps. Ask your child to identify which object will move faster.
This printable worksheet will help your child recognize and identify the Pl, Cl, and Sl consonant blends, sound them out, and identify them in print. Improve your child's reading and writing skills with fun and colorful phonics practice!
Help your early reader develop prereading skills with this fun matching worksheet! Visual cues help them learn sight words, decode words in word families, and identify phonetic patterns. They'll practice discerning sounds past initial consonants while saying the name of the picture and finding the matching word - and reading at the same time!
Help your kids sharpen math skills with extra homework, stimulating exercises, and fun worksheets. This printout features four equations with fractions and number lines. Your child's task is to check the number lines with denominators of 4. Enough to get them thinking and learning.