Do your students know who Thomas Jefferson was? He was the 3rd US president and wrote the Declaration of Independence, setting the 13 Original Colonies free from British rule. This momentous act shaped American history and helped build the nation we know today.
Ask your child to list qualities of a good citizen. Show them the pictures of good citizens in school and explain how they can display those behaviors. Help your kid trace the lines on the worksheet to match the pictures. Encouraging good citizenship in school helps children become upstanding members of their community.
Review the worksheet with your students/children, checking the boxes corresponding to the question. There may be multiple answers. Test their understanding of different communities by having them identify what happens in each place. Use this to measure and refine their knowledge.
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!
To grow your child's learning, challenge them with new tasks. Stimulate their brains with activities that will build their knowledge and thinking skills. Take advantage of this worksheet exercise: ask your child to check the rows where all the numbers are equal. This simple exercise will improve their learning.
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.
Math can be stressful for kids. But you can help relieve their anxiety with this simple worksheet. It gives them practice to help them prepare for tougher tasks. Have your child look at the numbers and green digit, then trace the dotted lines to match the green digit with its value in base ten blocks. This will help make math more manageable.
Teach your child to count, then write numbers in word form and back to standard form. In this worksheet, they'll match the numbers written in word form to their standard form and circle the correct car with the correct answer.
Explain to your child that precipitation is any form of water that falls from clouds and the sky. Ask them if it's a word they're familiar with? Show them this worksheet, with pictures of different weather conditions, and ask them to draw lines to the ones that show precipitation.
Read the sentences with your children and ask them to find the nouns. Explain that nouns are names of people, animals, places or things. Point out the boxes with the answers to check.
To help your children learn the basics of grammar, start with nouns, verbs, adverbs and adjectives. This noun search worksheet will help your child understand the most common part of speech - the noun. Ask them to underline the nouns in each sentence. This is a great way to start learning proper grammar.
This worksheet uses colorful images to engage students. On the left are six shapes, mirrored on the right, with fractions in the middle. Students must match up the fraction with the right shape. It's a fun way to sharpen fractions skills!
Help Mr. Robot get fixed! Give your students this fun worksheet where they need to guide him through the maze to the Repair Station. The paths they need to take are the ones with shapes that have 1/3 colored. Encourage them to look carefully and trace Mr. Robot through those paths.
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!
Help your child have fun while learning new things with this worksheet. Does your child know that some nouns require '-es' to make them plural? Use this pdf to teach them the rule and get the little frog to its mother – draw a line through the words with '-es' plural forms.
Your child should know the rule of adding '-s' to form plurals of nouns by now. Examples: bat-bats, cat-cats, song-songs etc. If they understand this, the task in the worksheet should be easy. Read the sentences and ask them to underline the correct plural noun.
Explain to your child that most singular nouns become plural by adding "-s". E.g. "cat"->"cats". For words ending in "-ch", "-sh", "-s", "-x", or "-zz", add "-es". E.g. "buzz"->"buzzes". Then, get them to circle the right plural form of each noun on the worksheet.
Verbs are action words. Examples: run, play, talk. Show your child this tracing sheet for them to learn about verbs. Ask them to trace the dotted lines from the spider to the words that are verbs. These words are what the spider can do.
Ask your child if they understand the meaning of the word "verb". If not, explain that it's a word that shows an action. Give examples of familiar verbs. Then look at the pictures in the tracing sheet and read the words. Ask your child to follow the dotted lines to find the hidden words. Perfect tool to teach spot and use verbs!
Counting is fun with these kindergarten math worksheets! Richard brought cupcakes and candy - help your child count each treat and circle the picture that matches the number. Let the party begin!
Help your child read the sentences on this tracing sheet about Harry and his pets. Point to the dotted lines and follow the sentences to the correct picture. Ask your child to identify which animal corresponds to which color. Check the picture to ensure accuracy. 80 words.
Do your kids love or fear spiders? Either way, they'll enjoy helping the little critters with this traceable worksheet. Ask them to read out the words in the picture, explaining it's the description of the hats. Then help them trace on the dotted lines, so the spiders know which hat to hide under.
Help your child identify words and guide the mouse home! Ask them to point out the colorful animal on the worksheet, then take their hand and show them how to trace the path, going through all the words in the maze to get the mouse back to its hole.
Help your kids differentiate between words and letters. If they can recite their alphabets and identify common words, this tracing sheet will be a breeze. Have them trace on the dotted lines to place the letters in the red bag with the kitten, and the words in the blue bag with the monkey.