Children should learn to read color words early on. This coloring worksheet helps with that! Kids read the words "purple" and "orange" on each balloon and color them accordingly. It's a great activity for boosting literacy and having fun at the same time! Watch your child gain more reading confidence with this cute clown printable.
Parks are great for fun! Kids can play, run and be as loud as they want! Ask them what their favorite activities are. If they love making friends, like Patty in this worksheet, help them practice their question words to get to know their new pals better.
Constructing sentences follows rules. Parts of speech like nouns, verbs, adverbs, pronouns, and prepositions help. This worksheet focuses on prepositions. Explain prepositions to your child, then examine the pictures together and help them complete the sentences.
Children can decode unfamiliar words by sounding them out or by recognizing sight words. Color words are an important part of sight word knowledge, so add them to your child's list! This color word worksheet is an effective assessment tool for teachers to use with preschool and kindergarten students. It checks their knowledge of five color words - they simply look at the flower and circle the appropriate color word!
Sing and color with your child! Enjoy the classic nursery rhyme Hickory Dickory Dock as they color this fun printable. Watch the elephant climb and crash down the clock in the final part of the song. It's sure to bring smiles and giggles!
Enhance your child's reading comprehension and help them sequence story events with this Rapunzel worksheet – it's thrilling and educational! Max 80 words.
Help your child develop their reading comprehension with this exciting Rapunzel story sequencing worksheet! Kids view pictures from the classic fairytale and number them in the right order, reinforcing their understanding of story events. Educational and entertaining!
Help your students build their sight word vocabulary! Early readers may not be able to sound out all words, so this worksheet teaches them to read two important sight words: boy and girl. They will color the letters and a picture of each, making it a fun and educational way to learn. Download the PDF now.
Add -ed to the end of words and you get a word that happened in the past. This PDF helps your child understand this concept by giving practice examples: walk, pull, jump and smile can all be transformed into the past tense with a -ed suffix. They'll circle all the words that happened yesterday and learn about the past tense.
Love humor? Introduce "funny" as a sight word with this fun worksheet! Have your child read the sentence then color the word in the center. Let them use their imagination to color the silly clown in any way they like!
Emergent readers need to know high-frequency words accurately and quickly to develop fluency. Connecting these words to colorful, fun pictures helps reading prosody. This assessment worksheet uses traceable lines to help learners match pictures to words.
Introduce your kindergartener to nursery rhymes using this printable worksheet. Sing Twinkle Little Star with your child and incorporate some simple actions. Even as a lullaby, it's a great way to teach letters and counting - have your child find and count all the letter 'S's in the song. For extra fun, try the Twinkle Little Star coloring page.
Expose your child to common high-frequency words with this free and colorful worksheet. It will help them use picture clues to choose the correct word for each phrase. The more they're exposed, the stronger their fluency will become when reading. This process is an important part of the emerging reader's learning-to-read journey.
Introduce The Bingo Song to your little ones. Have your kids sing some words and lines aloud, while you replace letters with claps. Add other activities: tapping, patting, jumping, and use your imagination. Print our free Bingo Song Coloring Pages and let your kids color them. Get more free worksheets at our website Kids Academy.
Teach your students about "tired" and "worried" with this worksheet. Have them read and color the emotion words, then color the pictures of a tired girl and a worried girl. Discuss what makes them tired and worried. Expand their vocabulary with this fun coloring activity!
Emerging readers can use pictures of cute pets and phrase repetition to match sentences to pics, building skills while having fun! It's a great way to bolster vocab and confidence, motivating them to keep reading.
This worksheet helps kids build pre-reading skills using stories they know and love! By connecting with prior knowledge, kids can develop ideas about characters and set the stage for reading strategies.
Test your kids' spelling skills with this worksheet! Show them the picture and ask what it stands for. Then, have them choose the correct spelling from the options given. Check their answer by circling the right one.
Help your students gain confidence in family vocabulary with this worksheet. Labelled images of a family (dad, mom, sister, brother) are featured, along with an accompanying activity to colour in the picture. Your students will feel a sense of accomplishment after reading and completing the printable.
Critical thinking is essential for reading comprehension. New readers must be able to identify the key information in different text formats. This worksheet helps children learn what they might find in cities and how to differentiate between stories and pictures.
This free PDF worksheet provides preschoolers an understanding of danger and appropriate play. It allows them to recognize dangerous situations and why they can be risky, granting kids perspective from both parents and teachers. It's a fun, safe way to help them internalize what's dangerous and what's not.
Help your students figure out the plural nouns in Lilliana's checklist. Look at the six objects in this PDF and add 's' to the nouns to make them plural. Show students how words can be tricky and explain how adding an 's' often changes the noun to its plural form.
This worksheet offers kids a chance to explore how information can be presented differently but still contain similar facts. They'll compare two texts and look for similarities, honing their reading comprehension and critical thinking skills.
Help your child get a jumpstart on reading with sight words! Print out this fun worksheet and get your child to read the sentence. Point out the word "and", then color the word and enjoy the rest of the scene! It's a great way to introduce sight words and get their early reading skills going!
Do your kids cycle? Chris is a cyclist practicing on a ramp. Look at the pictures with them and decide if Chris is above or below the ramp. It's an important skill to help your kids become fluent speakers and writers - using the right words to describe something. Cycling is a fun sporting event.