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!
Count from 100 to 120 with your child to help them finish the worksheet! Pet owners will be especially excited to help the cute frog complete its picture. With proper counting, your child will be able to easily connect the dots and finish the picture of the green frog.
Let your kids have fun counting farm animals on this worksheet! Help the farmer count the animals and have your child check the answers to assess their counting skills. Read the word problem at the bottom of the page and count the animals together. It's an entertaining way to practice counting and have a great time!
Encourage your students to count objects in this colorful worksheet. Ask them to circle the correct answers from the options given. See how much their counting skills have improved with your guidance. Have fun!
This worksheet is great for assessing your child's counting skills. It's a bit more challenging than the usual 'count to fifty' exercises. Have them trace the lines and skip count by 10's to help them learn counting in tens.
By now, your child should be able to count up to the hundreds. If they're still learning the tens, that's okay - as long as they're going at their own pace. This worksheet will be easy if they can count to ten. Ask them to trace the lines and skip count by 5's.
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!
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.
Prior to starting this worksheet, quiz your kid on shapes. If they gave quite a few, you've done well! This pdf will teach them more about cones; show them the pictures in the printout and have them identify which ones contain a cone.
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.
It's John's birthday and he needs your help. Ask your kids to draw a line from each present to the matching 3D shape. First, check they understand the difference between 2D and 3D shapes. Then, they can help John figure out which 3D shape matches each present.
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.
This worksheet shows students how some shapes explode into two or more equal parts. On the left side are four shapes, each splitting into two or more parts. Ask your child to point out which shape has the smaller share, and help them circle the correct number of shares.
Help your kids learn shapes by having them cut out shapes on this tracing sheet. Point out the dotted lines, then guide their hand as they trace them, breaking shapes into smaller parts. Ask your children to count the number of parts and check the answers given.
In this worksheet, kids learn about sharing and cutting shapes into equal parts. There are two groups of friends: one with two, the other with four. Ask your child which group has their food cut into smaller shares, and help them find the right answer.
Can your students identify and draw shapes correctly? If so, this exercise may be too easy. For those who are still learning, extra help may be needed. The worksheet requires students to select which shape is larger in each pair; circles and squares are included.
Help your child become friends with the alien in this worksheet! If they're fans of alien books and movies, they'll love it. Ask them to circle the parts at the bottom that make each window, then count the number of parts and check the correct answer.
Mark and his mom are making pies. He's dividing them into equal parts and needs help to name them. Let your students aid him by checking the correct answer for each picture. Have them think of their own roles in the kitchen when they're done. How do they help their moms?
Help your kids divide shapes into quarters! Have them trace dotted lines to cut each shape into 4 equal parts. Each of the 4 parts is called a quarter or a fourth. This worksheet will help kids learn more about dividing shapes into four equal parts.
This worksheet introduces Sam, his brother and Megan, her sister, who are sharing buns. Show kids the picture of half and quarter to help them understand. Ask if they know what half and quarter of a shape is before progressing. Help them check the picture showing half and quarter of a bun.
Ask your child if they know halves and fourths. If not, explain that halves are when a shape is divided into two equal parts and fourths is when a shape is divided into four equal parts. Look through this worksheet with your child and let them trace the dotted lines to the correct answer to show whether the shapes are cut into halves or fourths.