Kids love learning about dogs! This free comprehension passage is great for engaging them with interesting facts. From the text, they can learn about dogs and the work they do, then answer questions to test their understanding. It's an enjoyable worksheet with fast reading and comprehension practice.
Kids love learning about wolves and their ancestors, our lovable dogs. This text engages them with new facts, then they can practice their recall skills by answering the accompanying questions. The free worksheet helps them focus on details to better understand the text. Even if they don't realize it, they're learning while they read and have fun!
Exploring different countries' music is a great way for global learners to appreciate their place in the world. This worksheet helps them match music - like Salsa and Irish Folk - to various geographic regions with colorful visuals. It boosts reading comprehension while supporting their cultural understanding.
Kids love dogs and wolves, so engaging them with text about them is key. This free, downloadable worksheet allows kids to read statements about dogs and wolves and use picture clues and prior knowledge to decide if the statements are true or false, strengthening their reading comprehension.
This 3rd grade worksheet strengthens fluency and spelling in just a few minutes! Kids will read a sentence and fill in each blank with the correct sight word. Enjoy watching their skills grow!
Explain prefixes (words added to start of another word to give it a new meaning) and suffixes (added to end of word to change its meaning) to your kids with examples like 'unhappy' (prefix) and 'forgetful' (suffix). Now, help your child complete this worksheet, including circling words and checking boxes.
Read the sentences to your students. Ask them to spot words 'of, are, was' and trace the line under them. It could be challenging for them to use them correctly or understand their meanings. Provide help where needed.
Students are asked to circle all prefixes on this worksheet and brainstorm a list of words that have them. It's a great tool for teaching vocabulary and helps students understand new and unfamiliar words by recognizing how prefixes change meaning.
Teaching kids words in foreign tongues? Use picture clues to help them build connections for deeper learning! This PDF worksheet uses the three little pigs story to teach French words for three, pigs and wolf. Kids can make picture-word associations and follow traceable lines to match the French and English words.
Help your child explore the solar system with our engaging Space Maze: Saturn worksheet! Kids can trace words, use logical reasoning, and learn more about Saturn while having fun! This worksheet has it all, helping your child master reading, writing, and reasoning skills while learning about a planet.
Let your 3rd grader practice early reading and spelling with this festive Christmas maze! Have fun helping Santa find the fireplace and build fluency skills at the same time. This free worksheet is sure to be a hit and get your child excited for the holidays!
Antonyms are words with opposite meanings to another. For example, the antonyms of 'good' are 'bad', 'poor' and 'wicked'. Ask your child to give you antonyms for 'Prometheus', which relates to fire. Invite your kids to trace the lines to the fireplace if the words are antonyms, helping the people in the tracing sheet get warm.
This worksheet offers kids practice reading sight words in a story. With picture clues and repetitive wording, they'll work with words that can't be sounded out to reinforce their learning. This is an important step in the reading process that helps kids become more confident readers.
Practice decoding the /aw/ digraph with this printable. Students read sentences and select the word with the correct spelling to complete each one. Note, /aw/ is sometimes spelled /au/, so this worksheet helps prevent confusion. Have fun, and practice hard!
Help your kids understand matter's three forms - solid, liquid, and gas - with examples. Ask them to give their own and where to find them. Then, read and discuss the worksheet's facts about solids. Afterward, have them circle the solids among the provided objects.
Children will love this fairytale about a princess trying to get to the royal ball. With colorful images and context clues, they'll learn Italian words without even realizing it. They'll fill in the correct boxes and help Cenerentola get to her happily-ever after. This free worksheet will delight and teach at once!
Kids are often fascinated by dinosaurs, creatures that roamed the Earth before man. Sadly, they are now extinct. To learn more, read facts on this worksheet to your kids and help them answer the question at the end by selecting the correct option.
Ask your kids if they can name any common words with the /oo/ sound. Read each word with them and help them pronounce it. Then, have them circle the words that have the /oo/ sound as in moon.
Help teach your child to read and use tricky demonstrative pronouns. Use this 2nd grade sight words worksheet: there, those, these. Have them read each sentence and choose the right pronoun by looking at the pictures.
Help your kids identify words with similar meanings with this worksheet featuring a colourful picture of the Tortoise and the Hare. Show them how to check the boxes of animals with words that have similar meaning, then let them find more on their own. They'll love the challenge and you'll appreciate the educational value.
This fun sight words worksheet uses pictures to offer clues that help kids figure out the correct spelling of family, horse, house, and play! Kids read each sentence, then fill in the blanks with the right words. Adorable and educational!
The vowel digraph ea can be read in two ways. Examples of the long sound are "read" and "lead"; examples of the short sound are "bread" and "head". Ask your kids to give you more examples and then have them check off the correct word for the pictures on this worksheet. This will help them understand the ea sound.
Storytime can be your kid's favorite part of the day. Ask them what their favorite stories are, then read the text in the printout. Read along with them, making sure they understand each word. At the end, go over the questions and have them check the correct answers.