Have your students ever been to the Statue of Liberty? Ask them to tell you where it is and what it looks like. Every day, the statue draws a crowd admiring its beauty, taking pics and learning more about it. Pose a word problem and help them check the answer. Circle the correct total. (80 words)
Dive into an ocean of addition with this fun math worksheet! Help your little mathematician count and add colorful coral and fish. Point out phrases like "in total" or "all together" as a reminder to use addition. Watch them add to find the answer and check the boxes to finish!
Help your kids telling time with the minute hand correctly with this tracing sheet. Trace the correct minute hand to make the time on the analog clock the same as the time on the digital clock. Give them a pictured demonstration of how to do it and you'll be all set!
Help your kids arrange the buildings in order of height: highest (4) to lowest (1). Ask them if they can think of other ways things can be measured. Read the texts describing the buildings and check 4 for the tallest and 1 for the shortest.
Let your kids have fun with this baseball-themed addition worksheet! Read the three simple word sentences with them, then use the pictures to help them add with their fingers. Ask them to copy the fingers held up in the pictures, then check the box with the right answer. Kids who love baseball will enjoy this activity!
Abraham Lincoln is a key figure in US history. Remind your kids of his contributions and challenge them with this multiplication worksheet! Ask them to solve the facts in the picture and check the hat with the correct product.
Introduce your students to digital clocks. This worksheet will help them become familiar with them. Guide them through answering the questions - they're simple and stimulating. Encourage their young minds to explore the digital clocks in the exercise.
Fruits are tasty and bright! Can your kids name some of their favorites? With this worksheet, you can use fruit to teach your kids geometry. Talk about how shapes can be cut into halves. Ask them to tick the box for the fruit halves in the printout.
Test your child's knowledge of fractions with this worksheet! Have them examine the windows of a house and select the correct fraction from the options given. This is a great way to see how much they understand about wholes, fractions, halves, one thirds, and one fourths.
Help your child spot the correct arrays in this worksheet: having them count the items in each and check the boxes for the ones with 15 objects. Ask them to differentiate between rows and columns and explain which ones match the equation 5+5+5=15.
A line plot is an ideal method to organize data. For example, if your child needs to arrange objects for easy recognition, draw a line plot. This worksheet can help teach the skill. Kids must identify correct pictures that display line plots.
Before beginning, ensure your child is familiar with quadrilaterals (4 sides) and triangles (3 sides). This tracing exercise is easy: sort the shapes into the two groups and trace the dotted lines to the correct group.
Kids can use this colorful worksheet to learn math and addition while also exploring the night sky. Invite them to use a telescope to identify the things they see. Ask them to join Ana, the little girl in the worksheet, to count what she saw in two nights. Help them add the totals of each night to find out how many of each item she saw!
Do your children love the park? Ask them to tell you some of their favorite animals. Then, have them look at Olivia's graph. She visited a National Park and recorded all the animals she saw. Use the graph to answer the questions given.
Counting using one-to-one representation is a great way to develop a child's number sense. Use objects, pictures and images to help counting beyond the fingers. This worksheet uses everyday objects to practice counting. It encourages children to find the correct number and count forward. Give it a try!
Ask your kids if they can identify the rabbits in the picture, then help them solve the math problems. The rabbits need to hop from place to place, so look at the numbers and help your kids figure out the next one. These cute and friendly little animals make great pets. Have fun solving this worksheet together!
Help your students learn to draw a line plot correctly by giving real examples. In this exercise, they must check the data of a class of 18 students' heights (in inches). Have them compare two line plots and figure out which one is correct.
Your math learners can explore the School of Magic with this worksheet. They'll read equations with addition and subtraction numbers under 20, count back and forth to find the answer, then complete the counting sentences. Fun pictures and easy accuracy make it an enjoyable and successful learning experience.
At the bank, bankers count and record money properly to avoid losses. In this worksheet, kids count money and solve simple equations to find the correct answer. Help your kids work through the equations and circle the answer.
Your young mathematician will have fun counting and tallying zoo animals on this worksheet! Giraffes, elephants and monkeys - all accurately tallied at the bottom. They will assign values to each animal group to find the answer. It's math but they won't know it - it's a zoo out there!
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.
Doing many addition and subtraction problems is key for fluency and mastery. Word problems can help kids understand how math works in everyday life. Our math worksheet uses fun scenarios and pictures to teach how to find the missing addend. It's the perfect tool to help kids understand math better!
This worksheet can help your kids test their knowledge of shapes. They should have already been introduced to the most common shapes and be able to identify and draw them. Look at the picture and help your child identify each shape. Then, check which one isn't used to make the object.
Take your kids to a farm and ask them what their favorite part was! Show them this picture with hay bales and have them count them. Find the area then circle the correct number. It's a fun way to learn math and experience a farm!