Review with your students what a quadrilateral is: four sides and angles. Now, go through the worksheet with them. Look at the pictures and help them check the boxes to identify the shapes.
Woodpeckers peck wood, and this printout helps kids learn about triangles. Ask your kindergartners to draw a triangle, then draw a line through the shapes that have a triangle in them to help the woodpecker get out of the maze.
Try this fun math, reading and writing worksheet with your kids! They will love the colorful activities that perfect coordination and tracing. Engaging learning exercises help keep young minds sharp and boost skills. With these worksheets, your kids will be academically ahead of the curve!
Engage your kids' minds with colorful, fun exercises like this worksheet. Learning should be continuous, so take the time to do extra activities with your children. Show them the pictures, then read the clues and help them trace the lines to match the shapes.
If your kids are into robots, they'll be thrilled to work on this worksheet. Ask them to name shapes they know, and help them draw and identify these shapes. Look at the shapes in the middle, and the sides. Finally, help your kids trace the lines to build the shapes in the middle.
This bright worksheet will get your kids excited to learn more! Use the colorful images and shapes to engage them and have them trace the parts to build the shape. This fun exercise will help them retain the lessons and make it an enjoyable experience.
Help your kids with more learning! Look at images in the worksheet, read facts about the shapes, then help your kids trace and draw. This reinforces that learning is never done; use this simple worksheet to help your kids with school homework and more!
This printable worksheet helps kids draw rectangles and triangles. Have your child trace the pizza and cracker shapes to become familiar, then try their own. Perfect for second graders! Coloring and creativity make this fun and educational.
Before beginning, ensure your child is familiar with quadrilaterals (4 sides) and triangles (3 sides). This tracing exercise is easy: sort the shapes into the two groups and trace the dotted lines to the correct group.
Can your child identify and name shapes? Help them learn the unique features of each and have them check the correct name for each group in the colorful pictures on this worksheet.
Does your kid love dogs? If so, this exercise is ideal for them! Help Charlie the pup find his way back to his owner, James, in the quadrilateral maze worksheet. Your child must trace Charlie's path only through squares and rhombuses in order to solve it. Careful planning is key!
Time to test your child's shape knowledge! With this worksheet, help them find the odd shape out in each row and check the box under it. Print out the pdf and look through it with them – each row has four brightly colored shapes. See if they can spot any differences among them and then check the box below the shape that does not belong.
This fun and colorful worksheet will help your child understand and identify quadrilaterals. It's simple and encourages them to draw lines to create a square, rectangle, rhombus, trapezoid, and parallelogram. Stimulate their minds and watch them learn while they have fun!
Does your kid know what a quadrilateral is? If not, this worksheet can help teach them. Explain that a quadrilateral is a shape with four sides and give examples, like a square or a rectangle. Then ask them to circle the quadrilaterals in the pictures. If they already know what a quadrilateral is, this task might be too easy.
Before beginning, ask your child what the object in the picture is, the sound it makes and where it can be found. If they know, confidently move on. Help them make the second train look like the first by tracing dotted lines. Hold their hand for guidance.
Your students' goal in this worksheet is to find the twin shapes: drawing a line between two shapes made of the same parts. Likely, the first shapes encountered were circles, triangles, rectangles and squares - examples of which are seen frequently in everyday life. Encourage them to apply what they know and work out which is the twin shape!
This worksheet can help your kids test their knowledge of shapes. They should have already been introduced to the most common shapes and be able to identify and draw them. Look at the picture and help your child identify each shape. Then, check which one isn't used to make the object.
Explain to your kids that 3D shapes are the view from another angle, offering depth, height and width. This worksheet encourages them to match the 3D shapes to their 2D form. They can circle the flat shapes that match the 3D shapes in the printout.
Introduce your child to 3D and 2D with this traceable worksheet. With dotted lines, help them trace and make a 2D shape for each 3D shape: square, triangle, rectangle, and circle. Show them there's more than one way to draw! You may have taken them to a 3D movie, or they've seen some fantastic 3D art. Now they can wonder no more.
Help your child read each sentence in this colorful worksheet. Have them identify the shapes described and check the boxes. To prepare, ask simple questions like "How many sides does a triangle have?" and "Which shape has 4 equal sides?" Your child will become more skilled at shapes by the end of this activity.
This exercise will help your child recognize shape sides. Go over the difference between sides and angles first, then have them check the shapes with arrows to show the sides. They'll quickly get the hang of it and find it much easier after completing the colorful worksheet.
Point at random body parts and ask your child to name them. Point to their face and ask them to identify it. Use this worksheet to show how "face" doesn't just refer to body parts - it can also mean the flat surface of a solid shape. Check the picture to find the matching solid shape for each face shown.
Sides are lines forming a shape; angles are points where two sides meet (pictured). Before going through the exercise, explain this to your kids. In the first exercise, check for birds holding shapes by their angles. In the second, check for birds holding shapes by their sides.
Assist your students in helping the Little Monster find the quadrilaterals in the exercise. Remind them that a quadrilateral is any shape with four sides, such as squares, rectangles, and kites. Guide your students with the dotted lines to draw the shapes correctly.