Help your new readers have fun and build their sight word vocabulary! Guide the mice to their prize cheese by having them trace the route on the worksheet, using words with the long o and long i sounds. But watch out for the kitty!
If your students are interested in aliens and otherworldly events, they'll love this exercise! It requires them to help a small alien cut rectangles into halves (½). They must trace the dotted lines to accurately cut each rectangle.
This worksheet stimulates thinking about arrays and how to represent them. Instruct students to count the 6 arrays and find which ones sum up to 12. Ask them to check the answers for accuracy.
Sing the beloved nursery rhyme "Five Little Monkeys" with your child, and add a finger play for extra fun! After a few times, encourage them to join in and fill the songs with laughter. Also, have fun coloring the worksheet featuring the monkeys and their Mama.
Explain to your students: when objects are blown by wind, they will move in the opposite direction. In the worksheet, there are pictures of wind sources and objects being blown by the wind. Ask your child to identify and check the direction each object will move.
Help your kids learn to read better with this worksheet! Introduce the vowel pair 'ai' and give them familiar examples. Ask them to give you some in return. Then, have them read the words on the leaves and help them trace the ones with the long /a/ sound.
Printable tracing lines for toddlers will provide your little one with the skills needed for future handwriting success. Proper grip, fine motor skills, and hand-to-eye coordination are key. Let's get their writing journey off to a great start!
Ask your kids what they see in the picture. Can they identify the animal? Where does it live, what does it eat and what sound does it make? These questions will help get them in the math mood. Help them count the eggs, tadpoles and frogs, then check the answer.
Help your kids with more learning! Look at images in the worksheet, read facts about the shapes, then help your kids trace and draw. This reinforces that learning is never done; use this simple worksheet to help your kids with school homework and more!
Help your early reader build beginning consonant and blend recognition with this fun whale worksheet! They'll feed the whale wh- words, circle sight words, and build fine motor skills—all while discriminating between differently colored words.
Believe it or not, good handwriting helps with reading! Starting at the top left and writing legibly builds reading skills. This free worksheet helps little learners practice basic sight words. Red dots show them where to start and the words provide reinforcement without them realising. An enjoyable way to boost their reading and writing.
Help your child hatch the chick and practice their counting skills with this dot to dot worksheet – the chicken came first! Connect the dots 11-20 to have fun and learn at the same time. Experience meaningful practice and gain confidence while drawing great pictures.
Encourage your kids to help Mama Bear find her way to her den! Ask them to count down from 5 to 1 and draw a line through the groups of berries on the path. Point them to the picture of the friendly bears. A fun and safe way to enjoy these cute animals!
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!
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.
Ask your kids to name different kinds of weather and what it's like outside now. Then, help them solve the number sentences on the worksheet by tracing the dotted line to the correct total.
Make learning numbers fun! Let your kids count the balloons, trace numbers, and circle the groups with five items. Also, have them trace the word "five" for letter revision. Get the full collection of preschool number worksheets from Kids Academy for a fun and interactive learning experience.
Your child can improve hand-to-eye coordination and pencil grip by tracing horizontal lines on this worksheet. They will have fun drawing lines on the rocket ship, tracing the dotted lines, and then coloring it in. Encourage them to keep going for even more enjoyment!
Subitizing is the ability to quickly identify sets of items without counting. It's a key skill for young learners to cultivate number sense. This worksheet takes it further, with 3-2=1 number sentences. Look at the sets of counters with slashes to decide which illustrate the sentence. Draw a line from the sentence in the middle to the right images to finish the page!
Help your children become number pros! This worksheet will give them the edge they need to count, while also helping them practice writing the number 0. Have them find the 0s in the printout, then trace them. It's a great way to build a math foundation and get them ready to succeed with more advanced math concepts.
Counting is a vital math skill, helping kids with addition and improving their speed when solving math problems. Let them practice with this fun sidewalk counting worksheet: have them take a walk and fill in the next number in the sequence as they count.
Show your kids the picture and ask them to identify the objects. Explain that bowling is a leisure game played with a ball and pins. Count the pins and have them circle groups of ten. This worksheet will make learning fun and easy, as your children already know the objects.
Help your child develop addition skills and improve number recognition with this easy-to-use worksheet. Have them count the dots and add to solve each problem. Then, trace over the number to complete each row! It's a fun and simple way for kindergarteners to practice their math skills.