Mixing subjects to help your child learn is always nice. This worksheet combines landforms, problem-solving and division. The PDF highlights numbers, uses bold colors and provides pictures to help your child understand the questions and answer choices, making them feel empowered, not intimidated.
Kids can sharpen their math skills with this fun PDF! They'll see pictures of friends at the beach, plus bold numbers and colorful pictures. All they need to do is read and understand the problem to find the answer - without even realizing they're doing division. A great way to make math enjoyable!
Students can learn math better when they understand the relationships between numbers. This free worksheet helps them practice division: solving problems and matching the correct quotient to balance the scales. Fun visual boxes make it a unique way to engage with the material.
Kids become better at solving division problems when they can recognize patterns between numbers. This fun PDF worksheet gets them tracing lines to find dividends and divisors that give a quotient of 3. All the while, they'll think they're helping a bird friend out! Problem-solving and division skills are a byproduct of their 'good deed!'
This free worksheet uses bugs and insects to help young math students learn about fact families and recognize patterns in multiplication and division. It's a fun and colorful way to gain automaticity and efficiency in computation skills, without even realizing it's math!
Kids love dinosaurs, so why not learn about fact families with some fun prehistoric friends? This PDF worksheet uses picture arrays to help kids understand the relationships between multipliers and dividends. It helps them build automaticity with multiplication facts so they can quickly solve division problems and see the relationships between the two fact families.
Dividing is simply grouping items into equal sets. This worksheet helps kids see division problems in array form. They'll match each equation with a picture group, using the lines provided. It's a great way for beginners to understand division more concretely.
Whether city or country, both have distinct attributes. Cities have skyscrapers, public transport, and many business people, whereas the countryside is rural and full of nature, often farms. Download this PDF to help your child and Cindy use traced lines to decide which picture fits city or country.
Young kids may struggle to differentiate push and pull. When they start writing, they may use them interchangeably and wrongly. This worksheet clarifies the concepts: pushing means moving something away, pulling means bringing something closer. It provides pictures and traceable lines for kids to connect each image to the correct word. This helps them understand and remember the difference for future writing and reading.
Teaching children the concept of opposites is important for their development. This worksheet offers a fun way to practice. Kids can use traceable lines to match farm imagery with pairs of opposites. It's a great way to help them compare and contrast, a key skill for reading, math, writing and more.
Animals migrate for various reasons, from weather to food. This free download is a fun way for kids to learn about the different migration methods, such as slithering or flying. Help your little adventurer guide the animals through the maze to the finish line!
Kids can learn healthy habits with this free worksheet! With their pal Heather, they'll trace lines to connect health words with pictures like brushing teeth, hugging, and getting enough sleep. It's a great way to help young ones understand healthy activities.
Our young children will have fun learning about their five senses with this free Sense Scientist worksheet. Helping Sebastian the Scientist, they'll name the five senses and use traceable lines to connect each picture with its correct sense. Colorful words and pictures will create a memorable picture representation.
Kids can learn about citizenship and their place in the world by studying their communities. This free worksheet is a fun way to do it - kids match pictures to what they find in their local community. They can trace the lines to show where they would spot the objects. It's an excellent way to get to know their environment!
Reading can be tricky to start with, but this worksheet helps kids learn the basics of editing and strengthens their attention to detail. They'll select the right word from tricky choices, improving their reading and grammar skills.
Add -ed to the end of words and you get a word that happened in the past. This PDF helps your child understand this concept by giving practice examples: walk, pull, jump and smile can all be transformed into the past tense with a -ed suffix. They'll circle all the words that happened yesterday and learn about the past tense.
Suffixes are letters added to the end of words to form new words. These can be used to denote one who does something (e.g. reader) or more than one (e.g. adding -s). This worksheet helps kids practice pluralizing words they know by circling the plural words ending with -s.
Homophones can be tricky for new readers and writers. This PDF worksheet helps kids understand the differences using pictures. It asks them to draw lines to connect the homophones and provides concrete imagery for reference. It's a great way to learn the right definition and spelling of words that sound the same.
Young readers can have difficulty knowing when to use the right homophone. This free worksheet helps them use familiar imagery to understand better by connecting words that sound similar but are spelled and mean different things. Students will trace the lines to form a picture and have a reference image to differentiate between the different homophones.
Good readers need to analyze text features and use picture clues to understand. This assessment worksheet gives your child info in different formats and they can show understanding using answer options to check the correct answers. (80 words)
Critical thinking is essential for reading comprehension. New readers must be able to identify the key information in different text formats. This worksheet helps children learn what they might find in cities and how to differentiate between stories and pictures.
This worksheet offers kids a chance to explore how information can be presented differently but still contain similar facts. They'll compare two texts and look for similarities, honing their reading comprehension and critical thinking skills.
This social studies PDF introduces kids to the differences between cities and towns. Colorful imagery helps them to distinguish between the two; for example, cities have traffic, business people and skyscrapers, while suburbs and rural areas do not. This allows children to have a reference point for what makes cities unique.
Kids learn best when they understand why they need to do something. This free worksheet uses traceable lines and pictures to teach them about germs and why washing hands is important. The child follows a left-to-right sequence and must check the correct picture to show they understand.