Test your students' knowledge of chess pawns. Present them with a worksheet featuring a picture, and ask them to identify the correct pawn moves. Afterward, they'll be better equipped to maneuver strategically on the chessboard.
Punctuation is crucial in sentence formation. If your kid still doesn't grasp it, bigger hurdles await when writing sentences. Get them to read simple sentences, then ask if they know the right punctuation. Assist them in selecting the sentence that has the accurate punctuation.
Trace red letter by letter, following the arrows and circling all the red objects. Look around your room and find something red. Have fun and become a handwriting master with this worksheet!
This worksheet boosts young learners' everyday vocab with fun high-frequency weather words. They'll see and match familiar pictures to the words they read. Plus, it helps them develop fine motor skills. Perfect for preschoolers.
Kids should practice math problems in different ways. This fun worksheet uses butterflies to represent numbers in word problems. Help your child read the problem and count the butterflies to find the correct illustration. Then, pick the equation with the correct answer and find the solution. Tick the box to complete! (80 words)
Help your early reader develop prereading skills with this fun matching worksheet! Visual cues help them learn sight words, decode words in word families, and identify phonetic patterns. They'll practice discerning sounds past initial consonants while saying the name of the picture and finding the matching word - and reading at the same time!
Teach your preschooler geometry using everyday objects. This printable worksheet helps them recognize, match, and follow directions like left and right. Start a conversation to extend their learning and they'll see how shapes appear in the world around them.
Winter's here! Get your child ready with a fun matching worksheet. Challenge them to sort mitten designs, recognize directions, and match mittens in other rows. This helps preschoolers hone problem-solving skills and recognize shapes. Print out more seasonal activities for a diverse summer experience!
Help your kids draw a crescent and triangle with this free printable worksheet! Start by tracing a crescent in the form of the new moon, and then teach them that a triangle has three sides and looks like a hat. Find more geometry practice worksheets at Kids Academy!
Kids Academy offers free math worksheets to help practice counting, categorization & recognition skills. Kids will enjoy counting by color & type while strengthening problem-solving & literacy skills.
Students have homes where they can do things they love, sleep and stay safe from bad weather. Check the worksheet for animals and their shelters. Ask your kids to identify each and match the animal home to the picture. (80 words)
Teaching kids about weather is a fun way to start science learning. This worksheet helps recognize symbols, literacy skills and make real world connections. Your child will love it!
Kids can have fun and strengthen their visual perception skills with Two Rook Mate Bingo. This worksheet challenges them to identify which chess boards show a king in checkmate using the Two Rook Mate strategy. Once they choose the correct one, they get the prize for checkmate! Playing chess helps kids with strategy, logic, and critical thinking.
It's crucial to teach kids to identify sight words and become fluent readers. This free worksheet helps make it simpler for kids to learn the similarities and differences between similar words. They'll get practice by looking at the box word and selecting the one that matches from the row.
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!
Introduce your child to traditional dances from across the globe with this worksheet. They'll learn to identify dances from different cultures, use their critical thinking skills and build an appreciation for different cultures. Let’s help kids to appreciate people’s differences and explore the world with this fun, colorful worksheet.
Chess involves math! Each piece has its own value, from the king (worth the entire game) to the queen (9 points), varying according to their power and role. In the worksheet, your child must use these values to solve the equations at the bottom.
Have your kids give you a list of things they see at school. Then, view the worksheet together. Ask them to check the boxes next to the school items. Look for objects that can be found at school and those that don't belong. This is a great way to check their knowledge of what they see at school daily, except on weekends and holidays.
During the day, the sun radiates bright light. At night, when it's time for bed, the sun sets and darkness takes over. To light our way, we use other sources of light. With your students, trace the dotted lines around the pictures of light sources and check the boxes under the objects that will cast shadows.
Preschoolers should begin learning about seasons and weather early. Most can tell what season it is by upcoming holidays or school activities. Test their knowledge with a printable PDF worksheet. It asks them to match each image with its corresponding season!
Introduce your students to the 4 most common shapes: squares, triangles, rectangles and circles. When they progress, show them other shapes like rhombuses and parallelograms. Use this matching shapes worksheet to help them match two identical shapes. Print out the worksheet and instruct them to draw lines connecting them.
Kids love animals and this worksheet is a great way to teach them where they live. It reinforces classification skills and introduces new animals, like the Arctic hare. Use it to discuss the Arctic climate and how these animals live, then ask your child where other animals live to keep the conversation going.
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.