Race your pencil to the finish line with Kids Academy's exciting maze worksheet! Remind your little racer that adjectives describe nouns - looks, sounds, and more. On your mark, get ready - zoom through the track and circle each adjective you see!
Help your child understand main ideas with this fun doggy worksheet from Kids Academy! Have them read the passage and then discuss the main idea. After that, have them read the answer choices and pick the right one. This will help your kiddo hone their critical reading comprehension skills!
Our learners can find it hard to use writing to add detail, but adjectives can help. With this fun worksheet, kids can identify adjectives that describe food and drink. Guide them through each sentence, discussing the words and having them choose the one that gives information about the food/drink.
Take your kids to the zoo and ask them about their favorite activities and animals. This worksheet is a great way for kids to learn about adjectives. Explain that adjectives describe nouns like people or animals (e.g. big, tall, dark). Look at the printout with your kids and help them circle words that describe the animals in the picture.
In this worksheet, your kids will explore writing styles like descriptive, explanatory and persuasive. Read them the descriptive text, then have them answer the questions. Writing is an art – it's a way to express emotions, tell stories and share information.
Help your kids understand adverbs by giving them an example with an adverb. Ask them to point it out. Adverbs often end with –ly. Give them a worksheet to circle adverbs in a picture. This way, they'll easily identify them in a sentence.
Help your kids identify adverbs with a fun worksheet. Read the words aloud and ask them to circle the adverbs showing 'where.' Give them easy examples, like 'the girl stood over there.' See if they can create their own examples. This activity makes learning adverbs fun!
Encourage your kids' learning with a fun worksheet! Help them circle the best meaning for the underlined words in the sentences. This activity is a great way to practice what they learn at school and have fun. Your little ones will enjoy learning new words and make the experience even more memorable.
Before starting, ensure your kids know nouns & verbs, then explain adverbs give more meaning to verbs. Give examples & read each sentence with them, helping to underline the adverbs. 80 words
Let your kids listen to interesting stories while having fun! Read the short story in this worksheet, point to the picture representing each sentence, then ask the questions and check the answers. Doing this will help your children learn new things and build their vocabulary.
Reading skills are essential for success in all subjects, from science and math to fiction. This worksheet helps kids learn to interpret diagrams by studying the rabbit illustration and then selecting the correct answer for each sentence. It's a fun way to build reading and comprehension skills!
Teach your child to use context clues with this engaging Kids Academy worksheet. Read the sentences and find the pink-highlighted word. Use the other words in the sentence to figure out the meaning, then check the box next to the picture that represents it.
Informational texts offer great learning opportunities. Kids Academy's reading worksheet helps children read and recall important details from a text about bunnies. Kids will love it! Simply read the rabbit facts and circle the correct pictures to answer the questions.
Encourage your kids to write their own short story before doing this exercise. It's about Rosa and Miguel on their first day of school, meeting their teacher. Read the story aloud and ask them to focus on Rosa's feelings. Then, help them circle the correct picture for the question.
Does your child know about insects? If they're a nature lover or scared of them, use this worksheet to learn more. Read each of the questions and help them fill in the yes or no boxes. This may help them become less scared of insects.
Poems are lovely works of literature; some with rhymes, and some without. This poem for kids is full of rhymes and tells the tale of a sheep. Read it aloud to your kids, then help them circle the rhyming words.
Help your child read the words on each leaf of a worksheet. Make sure they know that spellings can be misleading and tricky. When finished, ask them to identify the leaves with three rhyming words. This exercise helps their pronunciation skills and encourages critical thinking.
Explain to your child what a rainforest is and why it's important. A scientist took a four-day trip to count endangered species. Let your child count how many of each species were seen in total. Check the answers and help them understand.
Do your kids love visiting the zoo? Ask which animals they remember & which ones they liked the most. The manager needs help to get enough food for all the animals. Help your child use regrouping to figure out how many animals there are. And ask them to check the answers.
Let your kids enjoy story-telling while learning at the same time. Help them learn from the fairytale, Puss in Boots, by connecting words from the worksheet with the matching pictures. Ask them to draw a line between each picture and corresponding word to build their vocabulary.
Students should know the meaning of words, even when used in different contexts. This worksheet has two sections. In the first, there's a picture on the right side. Ask students the meaning of 'ill' in "she is very ill today". Help them circle the correct answer from the options. The second section follows the same pattern. Make sure students circle the right answer.
Encourage your kids to complete this fun worksheet. Ask them to identify the animals and objects in the pictures. Read the incomplete sentences aloud, and then find the correct word to finish the sentence. Check their work.
Vowel pairs make different sounds than individual letters. The 'ai' combination often forms the long /a/ sound, like in 'brain' and 'strain'. Get your kids to look at the pictures in the worksheet, identify each and say the name aloud. Help them circle the words with the long /a/ sound.
Practice the "th" digraph with this fun worksheet from Kids Academy! See how it appears at the beginning, middle, or end of words and help learners fill in the blanks. Check if they got it right by finding the th digraph at the bottom!