Test your child's matching skills with this worksheet! Ask them to name each of the objects pictured, then circle the ones that are the same. Repeat for the second task. It's a great way to assess their skills and have fun at the same time!
Challenge your kids to look at the pictures and identify colors, shapes and patterns. Ask them to circle the shapes that follow the sequence. See if they can spot the pattern and stick to it!
Help your child look at the patterns in the tracing sheet and guide them to trace the dotted lines to match the shapes. This exercise tests their ability to copy pictures correctly, so emphasize the importance of paying attention to the instructions and details.
This tracing sheet helps your little ones develop their skills. Ask them to identify the animals, then trace the shapes in the space provided, following the dotted lines. It's a simple task that can help them grow and have fun!
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.
This tracing sheet can help your child improve their number knowledge, from hundreds to tens. On the left are different numbers, with the same on the right. Ask your child to connect the matching numbers with the dotted lines. Make learning numbers fun with this traceable printout.
Kids who love haunted houses and Halloween will love this worksheet! Help the ghost reach its haunted house by tracing the path of 3 hundreds or 2 hundreds numbers. At the end is the ghost's spooky home. Have fun!
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 your child identify shapes by having them find shapes made up of equal parts. This colorful worksheet challenges them to look through each row and circle two matching shapes. It's a great way to teach them the unique features of each shape, while also helping them understand that identical shapes can look different.
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.
Does your kid love dogs? If so, this exercise is ideal for them! Help Charlie the pup find his way back to his owner, James, in the quadrilateral maze worksheet. Your child must trace Charlie's path only through squares and rhombuses in order to solve it. Careful planning is key!
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.
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.
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.
Head to At the Market! This attractive worksheet features arrays of delicious fruits and veggies that'll have 3rd graders working on their multiplication. Solve the problems, choose the correct answer, and learn while having fun!
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.
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.
Help your students learn to draw a line plot correctly by giving real examples. In this exercise, they must check the data of a class of 18 students' heights (in inches). Have them compare two line plots and figure out which one is correct.
An array is objects, pix, or numbers organized in rows and columns. Show kids two ways to interpret this: 3 rows in 4 places = 12 and 4 columns in 3 places = 12. Help your child trace the number sentences to the matching cars. All equations always add up to the same amount.
Explain to your child that an array is a group of objects, pictures, or numbers in columns and rows. Show them a rectangular array is a group of objects in equal rows and columns. Guide them to check the pictures in the worksheet to spot any rectangular arrays. Help them remember this concept.
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!