This worksheet is ideal for honing your child's place value and mental math skills. It encourages them to learn by looking at models and performing calculations based on instructions. Build your child's number sense with this handy tool!
Trace and write the letter K; start at the big red dot. Use it to complete words like "Kettle" and "Kangaroo". Visit Kids Academy for more free alphabet worksheets for kindergarten.
Kids Academy's phonics worksheet is full of fun and color! Help your child name the pictures and read the words under each one. Does it begin with an R or S? Then, use a pencil to trace the dotted line from the letter to its image. It's a great way to practice phonics skills!
Syllabication is vital for prereading and decoding words. Download this fun, free worksheet to help your reader practice breaking words into syllables and arranging them for reading. It also strengthens fine motor skills as they trace the numbers for each syllable, guided by a cheerful elephant!
Engage your kids in fun exercises and colorful pictures to help build their vocabulary. Start with a colorful worksheet - can they identify the colors? Guide them to draw a line from each picture in the middle to the correct color. It's a great way to boost their vocabulary and have fun at the same time!
Meet Bill, a fun character who does the same things as all of us! This time-telling printable worksheet, 'After School', is an enjoyable way for your child to get familiar with Bill. It's a quick and cute activity to help understand the clocks and learn more about this new friend.
Help your kids learn about George Washington Carver with this fun worksheet! Assist them in bringing peanuts to Carver by drawing a line through the correct multiplication facts. Introduce them to Carver's genius creations and show them how he used peanuts to improve the soil condition.
Before starting, ask your students to count as high as they can. Explain that different numbers can add up to the same total. Give examples like 2+2 =4 and 3+1 =4. Ask if they can think of other examples. Then have them work through the equations in the printout and circle all that add up to 11.
Help your child learn about verbs with this fun worksheet! Colorful images prompt them to fill in the verb, helping build their writing skills. It's a great way to make learning enjoyable.
This bright printout lets your students sort the foxes by size. Ask them to identify objects, then trace the dotted lines to put the foxes in the right group. Clear and easy instructions make this a fun and colorful exercise for your young ones.
This bright and cheery traceable worksheet encourages children to practice auditory discrimination and phonological awareness. Using picture clues, they read each word and trace the line that represents the number of sounds heard. This builds decoding skills and helps them become successful readers.
Chess is an ideal way to develop logic, strategizing, problem-solving and more! Even kids can learn it. With this worksheet, children can learn about draws and stalemates. Sample boards will help them decide which team, black or white, is at a stalemate.
This worksheet helps your child understand addition. Have them trace the dotted lines to the correct equations: +8 and +5. It's a great way to aid their mathematical comprehension and get them comfortable with adding equations.
With this fun worksheet, they'll explore physics by sorting objects into categories according to their mode of motion. It's a great way to get them interested in science.
This worksheet tests phonetics and word recognition. Students should be familiar with past tense verbs. Read incomplete sentences, then read multiple options and help students select the correct one.
This worksheet helps kids develop fine motor muscles and practice writing. Have them trace the word "brown" with a crayon, then find the brown objects in the picture. Ask them to look around and say what's brown in their room to make it more fun. Writing basics and a bit of fun - check out this free printable handwriting worksheet! For more tracing color words, check out here.
Picking fruit is fun - and counting it is even better! This free worksheet is perfect for young math learners. They'll use picture representation to count the fruit in each problem and then select the correct answer from the multiple-choice boxes. It's a great way to teach number sense in an easy, fun way!
Help your third grader master place value with this free thousands worksheet! Numbers up to ten thousand become easier to understand with Base Blocks. Increase your child's number sense while having fun!
This bright and colorful numbers assessment worksheet is a great way to assess your child's numeracy skills. It provides a sweet treat for them, and helps them recognise 1, 2 or 3 objects. One-to-one representation is key for foundational math skills, and this PDF helps your child build these essential skills.
Children can build number sense by exploring the relationship between numbers. This worksheet uses bright international flags to compare numerical groups. Kids will love the cheerful colors and flags from different countries. It encourages them to compare numbers and reinforces their number sense with tens and ones place values.
Help your child learn to count to 10 joyfully with this kindergarten math worksheet: Find a Ten! It's full of vivid images to make counting easier. Just count the items in each picture and trace the dotted lines for the correct answer.
Trips are important to all - transportation and its modes have made travelling easier and quicker. Ask your kids to identify the transport in the picture then help them check the right blocks so passengers can reach their destination.
Test your child's reading comprehension with The Boy Who Cried Wolf worksheet. Read the fable, then answer the questions. Use the text to help your child check their answers are correct. Boost reading skills in a fun, interactive way!
Remind your kids that adding different sets of numbers can give the same total (e.g. 2+3=5, 4+1=5). Ask them for more examples. Afterwards, work through the exercise. Help them count the objects and trace a line to the missing number that makes the total 14.