Playing chess boosts your children's brainpower and this worksheet helps them out of sticky situations. It teaches them how to flee with their king to avoid checkmate, as well as how to initiate their own strategic moves on the board. Get your kids on the road to success with this helpful PDF.
Let your little mathematician join the Three Little Pigs on an adventure! With this free worksheet, they'll guide the pigs through a maze of numbered bricks, using one-to-one representation to get to the sturdy house. Have fun helping the piggy friends past the wolf!
This geometry worksheet assesses a student's knowledge of shapes and positional words. They must identify shapes with 4 sides and corners on a triangle. The worksheet also tests understanding of words like "up", "front", "down" and "behind". Easily determine what your student knows about these concepts with this downloadable worksheet!
Boost your child's geometry skills with this shapes maze worksheet! Help Matthew bowl a strike by guiding him through the maze to draw a line through every 3D shape. It's a fun and challenging way to practice foundational math skills!
Learning shapes is a fun way to boost spatial skills and critical thinking. This worksheet shows children how to use triangles to construct squares and rhombuses. Clear illustrations and a printout help children draw the new shape. A great activity for the math classroom! 80 words.
Rewards come in many forms for kind deeds. When your children do good, you can choose to reward them with a gift or compliment. The students in this worksheet have been awarded the Good Citizen Award for kindness. Let your kids help the students find their way to the award - at the center of the maze. Guide them through to get their prize.
You are a citizen of your school, city and country. Many people migrate to become citizens of another place, like Niko in this worksheet. Ask your students to help her find her way from Japan to America.
Trace the dotted lines to connect images with their first letter: "n" or "m." Challenge your child to name each picture, then identify the first letter and trace to the right letter! Five images in total.
Traceable pages can be great learning tools for children. For example, have them trace the path of lowercase letters to help a bumblebee pollinate flowers. Students will quickly learn the difference between uppercase and lowercase letters and numbers, and have fun doing it!
Kids can have fun helping a rabbit find her carrot by picking the path with uppercase letters. This worksheet teaches letter differentiation while building confidence. Kids will have a great time while getting an essential skill!
This assessment tests matching, sorting and fine motor skills. It challenges kids to identify properties and attributes of pictures, trace guidelines and count the types of vehicles. It's a great way to practice basic number sense and hone in on important foundational skills.
Your child can identify force examples by checking the pictures. There are 8 images of kids engaging in activities and objects in motion. Get them to name the activities and objects, or if they know, explain force and interaction.
Introduce kids to deserts with videos or photos. Describe how, in deserts, camels are used for transportation due to their ability to go long distances without water. This worksheet gives kids the chance to help a camel cross the desert by drawing a line from 1 to 10.
Before starting the worksheet, ensure your child understands castling in chess. If not, take time to explain it. Once they have a clear grasp of the rules, help them complete the exercise. Check the board to ensure that neither king can castle.
Castle your king with the rook to get into a safer position! Write 0-0 for a two-square move, or 0-0-0 for a three-square move. Look at the worksheet with your child; on the first chessboard, the king has moved two squares and the rook is beside it. On the second, the rook has jumped over the king. Let your child use their castling knowledge to answer the questions in the easy pdf.
Notating chess moves can be tricky for kids to learn. This worksheet will help them better understand it. To notate a move, write the piece's short name, start and end squares, and separate them with a "-". For instance, Bd4-d2 means a bishop moved from b4 to d2. No need to write pawns' short names.
Test your child's chess prowess with this simple worksheet. They must find the missing pieces to complete the white side of an empty chessboard. The black pieces are already arranged properly on the board. Correct answers are provided so you can see how they did!
Pawns are the first to attack in chess and each player has the most pieces. They can't jump over other pieces, so if there's an obstacle, the pawn can't move. Ask your child to put an X to show all possible moves for the pawns not blocked by other pieces. (80)
Show kids the board and ask them to identify the bishop. Then ask them to move it to the square marked 'x', drawing lines to show its path. This worksheet helps teach kids how to move the bishop on a chessboard.
Is your child a chess whiz? Check their progress with this rook quest: get the enemy's pawn piece in just two moves. Have them draw the lines for the moves they'll make. See how quickly they master it!
Chess is a great way to help your child develop their strategic, mathematical, and thinking skills. Test their understanding with this simple worksheet: they must get the black king in checkmate with white pieces, then select the notation that shows the correct move. See just how much progress they've made!
Your child can test their chess knowledge with this worksheet. If they've been taking lessons or playing regularly, they'll enjoy connecting the dots to put the white king in checkmate, then checking the correct notation. Challenge their chess skills!
Help your little math learner visualize number stories with this engaging worksheet. They'll connect pictures to the story and use math facts to find the sums. After that, they'll be able to identify the correct number sentences to match. Let them practice and get better at problem solving!
Visualizing word problems can help students solve them. This fun PDF worksheet encourages students to create mental images using math facts, then check boxes to match the equations for basic addition problems. It's a great way to build confidence in solving math.