Reading is a fun and important way to learn. Help your students become better readers with this simple yet colorful worksheet. Read each sentence aloud, then have them read it by themselves. Ask them to check T for True and F for False. It's a great way to practice their reading skills!
Help your kids understand the cause-effect relationship of sentences by having them complete this worksheet. There are four incomplete sentences at the top and four options at the bottom. Have them select the appropriate letter for the effect of each cause. This will be the first step to their future of composing grammatically correct and meaningful sentences.
Encourage your child to express their personality by writing stories. Show them this worksheet's short story about Robin Hood and read it slowly and carefully. Read it again if needed and ask the question below the story. This will help your child use their knowledge to answer it.
Antonyms are words with opposite meanings to another. For example, the antonyms of 'good' are 'bad', 'poor' and 'wicked'. Ask your child to give you antonyms for 'Prometheus', which relates to fire. Invite your kids to trace the lines to the fireplace if the words are antonyms, helping the people in the tracing sheet get warm.
Read the words list with your kids, pointing at each one. Ask them to do the same. Help them find the arrows with those words and trace the line to the target in the centre.
Before embarking on this Robin Hood adventure, ensure your child reads and comprehends the 'Reading Folk Tales: Robin Hood' worksheet. Have them consider the story's lessons, and observe the details. Read the questions and help your kids select the correct answers.
Ask your kids: "What are homophones?" Explain that homophones are words that sound alike but have different meanings, like 'dare' and 'deer'. Ask them to identify homophones by putting the crayons in this printout away according to the words.
Help your kids learn with short, fun, interesting poems! Read it aloud to them and point out the rhyme patterns. Have them circle the missing numbers to answer two questions. Show examples of objects with the colors in the poem. This will help them learn to read, and also understand colors better.
Astronauts are essential explorers. They travel between Earth and other planets to gain knowledge of life in space. Being an astronaut requires strong math skills, so help your child develop them through this worksheet. Ask them to assist Sally on her journey to the planets by solving the number sentences in the picture. Verify the answers are correct.
Your kids will love this worksheet! They can help astronauts reach Jupiter by tracing a line through all the equations and adding them up correctly. Spark their curiosity about space by exploring asteroids, planets, and aliens. Astronauts are professionals who study the complexities of space - let them help your child join in the journey!
Kindergarteners need to work out subtraction problems and get the right answers. To help them, point to the alien ship with '30' in it on the worksheet. Get them to follow a line to the equations with a difference of 30. Solving these simple subtraction problems will give the answers.
Outer space is an intriguing world. Physics behave differently than on Earth, and much remains to be uncovered. In this worksheet, scientists have located a new solar system in a distant galaxy. Explain to your kids what these two things are, then have them help count the findings. Solve the math problems, then link the lines to the right answer.
Kids can use this colorful worksheet to learn math and addition while also exploring the night sky. Invite them to use a telescope to identify the things they see. Ask them to join Ana, the little girl in the worksheet, to count what she saw in two nights. Help them add the totals of each night to find out how many of each item she saw!
Challenge your child to regroup the base ten blocks and solve the four equations in this worksheet. This exercise requires counting and adding up in base ten. When they are done, help them check the correct sum.
Have your students practice counting with base ten blocks. This will help them with math struggles. Homework and worksheets will help them improve; ask them to trace lines to the correct equation on a tracing sheet. Guide them as they count the blocks and trace the lines.
Counting is fun! Help teach your child with fun, colorful worksheets like this one. For simple sum-adding or counting high numbers, this printout helps them master the problems. Three equations with numbers are at the top. Guide your child to find the correct answer, then draw a line to the sum for each equation.
Oliver and Alleen are sewing traditional Scottish attire. Help your kids count the cloth and check the correct fraction to support them. Have your kids check the correct amount that represents each fraction to help the brother-sister duo prepare their material.
Help Shreya get to dance class! Draw a line through all fraction models that are equal to ½, starting at the entrance marked 'start'. Guide your kids through the maze paths and help Shreya -- she's an Indian girl who practices her cultures and traditions -- reach the door to her class.
Ask your kids to complete the equations in the worksheet and find the correct numerator. Explain that numerators are the numbers at the top of a fraction and guide them as they count the shaded parts of the shapes. There are three equations to figure out.
James and his family took a trip to Peru to explore Machu Picchu. You can ask your kids if they remember certain countries or landmarks from their past trips. This worksheet will help them figure out how much of Machu Picchu James explores each day. Read the questions and help them check the correct fraction on the number line.
Math can be fun! Have your child count points on the number line, then identify and trace fractions above it. It's a great way for them to learn and have some fun!
Kids must learn to identify and name fractions to solve equations. Included in this worksheet are three equations that need solving. Have your child match each point on the number line with the correct fraction and circle it. This exercise helps build their fraction skills.
Let your kids learn about fraction and history with this printout about the Great Wall of China. Three sisters take a trip to China to visit their grandparents and decide to walk the Great Wall. Ask them to study the pictures and pick the correct point on the number line to show how far each sister went. How about you: has your child ever been to China?
Help your kids sharpen math skills with extra homework, stimulating exercises, and fun worksheets. This printout features four equations with fractions and number lines. Your child's task is to check the number lines with denominators of 4. Enough to get them thinking and learning.