Help your child understand the differences between communities with this worksheet. Look at the family, school, football team, city, and country and discuss which is larger and which is smaller. Follow the red dot from the smallest to the largest.
This worksheet helps your students/children understand suburban communities. Have them read the sentences and check the true or false box for each. They will gain a better knowledge of the suburbs after this exercise.
With this price tag worksheet, you and your kids can have some educational fun! Check the numbers on the tags, ask your child to work out their expanded form, and circle the correct answers. It's a great way to teach math and keep them entertained!
Send your child on a secret mission! Help them open the safe by giving them the code numbers to convert into standard form (e.g. 700 + 50 + 2 = 752). Get them to circle the correct answer for each safe and see all that math knowledge pay off!
Match the word form numbers to the expanded form. Read the numbers aloud with your child and check the answers together. Clotheslines feature expanded form numbers, with word form numbers above each. Use this worksheet to help.
To grow your child's learning, challenge them with new tasks. Stimulate their brains with activities that will build their knowledge and thinking skills. Take advantage of this worksheet exercise: ask your child to check the rows where all the numbers are equal. This simple exercise will improve their learning.
Can your child count in tens? Show them how to count 100 boxes in stacks of tens. A worksheet can help them understand the concept. Ask them to count boxes of pineapples in stacks of tens and circle the truck with 100 pineapples.
Help your child understand multiplication with this worksheet. Ask them how many 'longs' will be needed to complete each flat, then have them circle the correct answer from the options. With this exercise, your child will learn that 10 'tens' make 1 'hundred'!
This tracing sheet can help your child improve their number knowledge, from hundreds to tens. On the left are different numbers, with the same on the right. Ask your child to connect the matching numbers with the dotted lines. Make learning numbers fun with this traceable printout.
Introduce your child to counting in the hundreds using this simple worksheet. Match each car to its correct cargo by drawing a line. If they can count 1-100, they can learn to count in the hundreds! Help them master this skill with the worksheet and they'll be counting away in no time.
Help your child overcome their dislike of math by guiding them with this base ten blocks worksheet. Count the blocks and answer the questions together. Ask them which number matches the base ten blocks shown. This will help them solve math problems more easily.
Kids who love haunted houses and Halloween will love this worksheet! Help the ghost reach its haunted house by tracing the path of 3 hundreds or 2 hundreds numbers. At the end is the ghost's spooky home. Have fun!
Math can be stressful for kids. But you can help relieve their anxiety with this simple worksheet. It gives them practice to help them prepare for tougher tasks. Have your child look at the numbers and green digit, then trace the dotted lines to match the green digit with its value in base ten blocks. This will help make math more manageable.
Teach your child to count, then write numbers in word form and back to standard form. In this worksheet, they'll match the numbers written in word form to their standard form and circle the correct car with the correct answer.
Teach students that precipitation is water from the clouds/sky in either solid or liquid form, e.g. rain is liquid and snow is frozen. Use the worksheet with them to check if the forms of precipitation pictured are solid or liquid.
If your child knows the meaning of "precipitation", start the worksheet. Otherwise, explain that it's any form of water that falls from the sky. Ask them for examples then look at the PDF with pictures and weather descriptions. Read them together and check the right pictures.
Explain to your child that precipitation is any form of water that falls from clouds and the sky. Ask them if it's a word they're familiar with? Show them this worksheet, with pictures of different weather conditions, and ask them to draw lines to the ones that show precipitation.
Kaitlin keeps a weather journal. Encourage your kid to do the same after completing this worksheet. Go through Kaitlin's journal with your kid, and discuss the weather for each day. Read the questions about her journal and check the correct answers.
Kaitlin keeps a weather journal. Encourage your child to do the same! Look at Kaitlin's journal with them, and have them note the weather for each day. Read aloud the questions and check the correct answers.
This worksheet will test your child's knowledge of the weather. Show them the pictures of five days of the week, each with a different weather and ask them to describe it. Then read the sentences and ask if they're true/false. Help them find the right answers.
Test your child's knowledge of weather with this fun worksheet. Ask them to look at the pictures and identify the type of weather. Then, have them select the correct answer from the options on the right. See how well your kids have been paying attention to the weather forecast!
Read the sentences with your children and ask them to find the nouns. Explain that nouns are names of people, animals, places or things. Point out the boxes with the answers to check.
To help your children learn the basics of grammar, start with nouns, verbs, adverbs and adjectives. This noun search worksheet will help your child understand the most common part of speech - the noun. Ask them to underline the nouns in each sentence. This is a great way to start learning proper grammar.
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.