Talk to your child about taking better care of the community. Look at the worksheet together - it has pictures of people taking care of their community and the environment. Show them how to trace the lines to the pictures of good citizens.
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.
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.
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.
Verbs are action words. Examples: run, play, talk. Show your child this tracing sheet for them to learn about verbs. Ask them to trace the dotted lines from the spider to the words that are verbs. These words are what the spider can do.
Your child should have basic knowledge of verbs and nouns before starting this worksheet. Go through it with them and ask them to circle the pictures with nouns under them. This way, they'll become more familiar with parts of speech.
Does your child know how to care for their eyes? Help them understand with this worksheet. Look through the pictures together and discuss the different ways to keep the eyes healthy and safe. These include visits to the doctor, wearing sunglasses, and eating healthy food.
Help your kids spot which of the kids in the worksheet are reading correctly. Early instruction in reading helps ensure kids won't face problems later on, plus any impairments can be identified and corrected quickly. Can your child read? Have them check the pictures of kids holding books the right way.
It's breakfast time! In this fun worksheet, a boy and girl are at the table, waiting for their meal. There are two trays, each with three different foods. Ask your child to find the one with all its food split into two equal parts. They'll be eating in no time!
Show your students the pictures and clocks in the colorful worksheet. Ask what the boy and girl are doing in each, then what time the clocks show. Finally, ask what activities they both do at the same time. Help them check the clocks showing the same time in both pictures.
Help your child assess their knowledge of chess with our simple worksheet. It contains six questions; read them to your child and ask them if the statements are true or false. Once they check the boxes for the true statements, you'll have a better understanding of their understanding of the game.
Test your child's knowledge of synonyms by having them name five words for "up"! This tracing sheet is a fun way to do it: your child must trace the dotted lines to put each ball in its right basket. To do so, they must know the synonyms and trace them to the correct baskets.
Look with your youngster through this colorful worksheet and match the pictures to the words at the top. These words have different meanings due to either a prefix or suffix being added, such as "ful" or "less".
Prefixes can change the meaning of words. Adding "Un-" can give the opposite meaning, like Un-true, Un-happy, and Un-finish. Help your child learn with this worksheet. Draw a line to the picture that shows each word's meaning.
Learning with tracing sheets is fun! Ask your child to list some things associated with warm temperatures. Then, trace the arrows on the worksheet with them and explore the items that can be warm. Have fun!
Young authors can find homonyms tricky - this brightly coloured worksheet will help them gain practice. Tracing lines to identify homonyms in easy-to-read sentences will also help improve their fine motor skills, essential for effective writing.
Take your kids to Fairytale Land! They'll meet witches, dragons, fairies, elves, knights, and princesses. This free worksheet adds up the fun, letting kids use three addends to solve addition equations and find the right answers. With friends like these, math won't even seem like math!
Someone has stolen the cheese! Can your mathematician detective figure out who it is? Was it the dog, cat or mouse? Have them use traceable lines to skip count by 10 on this free PDF worksheet to solve the case. They'll be having fun and developing their skip-counting strategy at the same time!
Let your kids enjoy learning to ask precise questions with this fun worksheet! Read each sentence fragment and look at the word bank, picking the correct word to complete the sentence. Check the box next to the correct word to use. It's that easy and lots of fun!
Start each query with the right words: practice using the "who", "what", "where", "when" and "how" of questions in this fun maze. Guide Little Red Riding Hood away from the wolf and to her grandmother's house with a pencil, tracing a path through the question words only, leaving the wolf and other words behind.
Learning language can be difficult, but this free printable worksheet will help! Have your child look at the picture and name it. Then help them choose the right question word to ask something about it. For example, when looking at a beach ball, you can't ask "Who?" Instead, look through the list to select the right word. It's a great way to learn language basics!
Help your child explore the fascinating cycle of plants and seeds with this worksheet. They'll learn how plants grow and how seeds travel to the ground. Challenge them to identify the right way each seed gets planted!
Kids can explore the life cycle of frog with this fun worksheet! Draw lines from one stage to the next to follow the transformation from tadpole to frog and learn about the cycle of life.