Introduce your child to George Washington and his contributions to our country's history. If they already know their numbers, have them help George count the ships! Challenge them to fill in the missing numbers between 107 and 120.
Ask your child to name some popular carnivores. Can they tell you what the animal in the worksheet is? A Tiger? Get them to count from 100 to 120 to connect the dots. After they finish the first picture, keep counting to help them practice!
Show your child the frog's life cycle and have them count from 100 to 120. Ask them to find the missing numbers in the picture and have them check the answers beneath the numbers. Help them get it right!
Check your kid's place value understanding with this assessment worksheet. It features 6 questions with one digit underlined for your child to determine the correct value of. Get the download and see if they can correctly choose the answer from the options given. It's a great way to test progress and keep their minds sharp!
Test your children's counting skills with this worksheet. Have them count from 90 to 120, checking for missing numbers. You'll be able to see how well they do and how far they have progressed. See how high they can count with little or no mistakes!
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!
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.
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.
This multiplication worksheet is perfect for grade 3 students to sharpen their math skills! Each problem unlocks the door to a house on the page - can they figure out which key fits which door? By solving each problem, they'll boost their multiplication skills and have fun along the way.
Do your children love the park? Ask them to tell you some of their favorite animals. Then, have them look at Olivia's graph. She visited a National Park and recorded all the animals she saw. Use the graph to answer the questions given.
With this worksheet, Alexa has asked her friends how many siblings they have. Have your child look at the picture and use it to answer the bar graph correctly. Can they tell you how many siblings their friends have? See if they can get it right!
This worksheet stimulates thinking about arrays and how to represent them. Instruct students to count the 6 arrays and find which ones sum up to 12. Ask them to check the answers for accuracy.
Does your child love Easter? Do they adore the Easter bunny and egg hunts? Help them have fun with this worksheet! Go through it with them and check the equations for each array. Then, have them circle the correct sum. It's a great way to make the holiday extra exciting!
Explain rows (horizontal) and columns (vertical) to your child before starting the worksheet. Show them the picture and the arrows indicating direction. Your child should be able to answer the questions easily after that. Help them match the fruit arrays that match the descriptions.
Help your child count and underline the matching number sentence in the worksheet. Ask them if the total number of birds in each picture is odd or even, then check the correct box. When two equal numbers are added, the sum is always an even number (e.g. 2+2=4, 4+4=8, both divisible by 2).
Explain to your kids even and odd numbers using this worksheet. All objects in a group of even numbers can be paired in twos, while an odd number leaves one object unpaired. Ask your students to find and check the groups with an odd number of fish, counting and figuring out which ones are odd.
To document pawn promotion, add "=<piece name>" to the move notation. For example: e7-e8=Q. Ask your child to look at the chessboard and take note of the moves. Check the notations are correct. (80 words)
Your child can test their chess knowledge with this worksheet. If they've been taking lessons or playing regularly, they'll enjoy connecting the dots to put the white king in checkmate, then checking the correct notation. Challenge their chess skills!
With this worksheet, kids can use the strategies of making tens and adding doubles to add numbers with more than three addends. They'll practice choosing the right method and become more confident in their calculations, enabling quicker, more efficient computation.
Teaching your kids quick computations? Get them skip-counting by 2s! They'll love filling in the colors of the train while counting, and it will help with 'counting up' or backward on paper or in their heads - essential for quick computations later.
This fun and inviting PDF worksheet gives young math students the opportunity to visualize counting back. They'll trace their way backward from 20 to 10 and help the pirate find his treasure, while also working on fine motor skills. Building foundational math skills like this is vital, so don't miss out on this colorful and inviting activity.
Love amusement parks? This colorful worksheet is sure to delight your child as they solve basic addition problems with missing addends. Picture representations help them solve the math equations, while traceable lines help them accurately complete the drawings. No roller coaster ride here, but still loads of fun!
Old MacDonald needs help counting his animals! Give your little math whiz a fun challenge with a free PDF worksheet. They'll love counting the animals and doing basic addition with two or three addends. Who knew math could be so much fun on the farm?