Kids can learn and strengthen problem-solving and strategic thinking skills with this free chess worksheet. They'll have fun as they look at the pair of chessboards and decide which is check and which is checkmate. It's the perfect way to get them playing the game and making checkmates without even realising they're exercising their brains!
Download this worksheet to teach your kids how to grow a flower with Lucy. Ask them to look at the pictures and trace the necessary steps. Help them go through the process of growing a beautiful flower with Lucy!
Motivate your child to practice math with a fun and meaningful Rapunzel addition maze! They'll learn single and double digit addition, problem solving, and gain confidence as they complete the maze and help the prince reach Rapunzel. They'll feel proud of their accomplishment when they finish!
Third graders can solve tricky multiplication and division problems with visuals of springtime bugs. Pictures guide them through the process, making it easier to understand. Plus, it's fun!
Preschoolers need to learn directional skills such as top and bottom. This PDF worksheet helps them recognize bugs on the top or bottom using fun visuals. It builds their spatial reasoning while teaching prepositional words in an engaging way.
Math has different levels and gets harder as your child progresses. Don't be surprised when they bring home an algebra worksheet! In this one, they will add 1 tens to varying numbers and fill in the total. This builds their understanding of base tens.
Ask your students to define 'society'. Then, have them name some of the people and buildings that make up a society. To clarify, explain that societies are made of large groups of people who share laws, rights and resources. Finally, have them check the box next to the pictures that depict members of society.
Pictures are powerful tools for children learning to read. Early readers apply their prior knowledge and pictures to create understanding. This PDF worksheet lets them understand the combined power of pictures and words, by having them choose one to answer how they learned the facts about flamingoes.
Does your child know when Independence Day is? They might love the family picnics and fireworks, or they may not understand the significance of the holiday. After this worksheet, they'll comprehend it better. Help them look at the images and count the number of rows and columns in each array.
Have your students identify the objects on the printout, then spell the words. If they already know how to spell, this exercise should be easy. Help them circle the correct letters from the set to spell out the words. This is a great way to reinforce reading and spelling skills. Max 80 words.
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!
Tracing curved lines worksheets are a great way to help your child develop fine motor skills, form proper writing habits and sharpen hand-eye coordination. An adorable worksheet featuring characters from our popular app helps make practice fun! It also helps build focus, stamina and overall confidence in their writing ability. Offer your child meaningful tracing practice and give them a head start in life!
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.
This fun worksheet will get your child's brain buzzing! They must help the characters solve the mystery of a flooding pond by reading the explanation and carefully considering each answer choice. Encourage them to think deeply about the possible cause before picking the most likely one.
Take your kids to Fairytale Land! They'll meet witches, dragons, fairies, elves, knights, and princesses. This free worksheet adds up the fun, letting kids use three addends to solve addition equations and find the right answers. With friends like these, math won't even seem like math!
Help your toddler grasp prepositions like "over" and "under" with this fun worksheet. Have them trace lines over the pictures on one half and under the pictures on the other, thus practicing basic communication and math concepts. Strengthen your child's understanding and communication skills with this activity.
This worksheet will surely bring a smile to your kid's face, even if orange isn't their favorite color. Let them trace the word "orange" and use an orange crayon. Ask them to find orange objects in their room for even more fun. Handwriting practice has never been more fun and exciting!
Weather and climate might sound similar, but they're different! Kids can discover the difference with this free, factual worksheet. Weather is the air's condition at one moment, while climate is an area's average weather. Kids can draw lines to connect factoids to either one. An interesting and educational activity!
Animals are fun to observe and interact with. They can be seen at the zoo, parks, farms and in homes with pets. This worksheet helps kids identify animals, and build addition skills. Look at the picture with them and help name each animal. After that, add the animals up and check the box for the correct answer. 80 words.
Let your 3rd grader develop better number skills with this dot-to-dot worksheet! They can have fun outlining a spaceship as they skip count by 500 up to 10,000. It's a great way to boost their number sense and make learning more exciting.
Kids can trace, write numbers and learn to pronounce them through exciting activities and games. Try our number worksheets for preschoolers to make learning fun!
Suffixes change the meaning of words: the -ly suffix usually describes how an action is done (e.g. slowly, quickly, loudly). Help your child understand this and then check out the fun worksheet. Ask them to identify the animals and people in the pictures, then read the sentences out loud and have them check the ones that finish the sentence.
This worksheet helps students infer characters' traits and feelings by reading The Boy Who Cried Wolf. They choose the correct emotion for each character to improve their story comprehension. A great resource for the reading classroom, it teaches an essential comprehension skill.