This bear-themed worksheet is a great way to test subtraction skills. Have your child read the word problems and match the correct drawing with the answer. It's a fun way to quiz them without them even knowing. Enjoy counting cute snoozing bears! (80 words)
Children can learn how their actions can help endangered animals with this free PDF worksheet. It explains extinction, looks at the mammoth as an example, and poses questions about conservation. Keeping habitats clean and safe is key to protecting animals and keeping them abundant. Learning about this now can make a huge difference for future generations.
Kids can explore prehistoric days with a fun, downloadable worksheet. They'll look at pictures of ancient animals like mammoths, ground sloths and saber-toothed tigers and then choose the animal of today that most closely resembles their ancestor. Through this sheet, they can make connections between today's animals and the past.
Kids love the fascinating world of dinosaurs! This free worksheet educates them on how archeologists discover clues from their fossils, teeth, and bones. They'll identify items that are fossils with the help of pictures and choices provided. Learning has never been this fun!
This free worksheet helps kids understand ancient artifacts, from statues to necklaces to fossils. They'll read comprehension questions and select answers from multiple choice options, with pictures to help them grasp the concept. It's a great way for children to learn about artifacts and what they may look like.
This worksheet will teach your children about Mohandas Gandhi and his humanitarian works. They'll read statements and identify them as true or false using answer boxes. It's a great way to teach kids about Indian history and the incredible legacy of Gandhi.
This free worksheet teaches kids about Marco Polo, the world explorer from Venice. They'll read about his journeys and the book he wrote and answer comprehension questions with multiple-choice boxes. He was just 17-years old when he started his travels!
Kids are citizens of the world, so it's important to teach them about different cultures and famous explorers. This social studies worksheet helps children learn about the great explorers of history and trace their travels. They'll link Ferdinand Magellan, Christopher Columbus and Roald Amundsen to the places they explored.
Kids can brush up on South American history with this free worksheet! They'll discover how the first inhabitants arrived from Asia and how this led to the growth of cities and colonies. Comprehension questions will help them sequence and understand the events of South American history.
History can be made exciting with this PDF! It encourages kids to compare and contrast the Middle Ages. They'll explore what people lived in, ate and wore back then, then compare those characteristics to modern day. Kids can check boxes next to pictures that represent the Middle Ages to complete the activity.
Young geographers can learn about the Equator with this free, colorful worksheet! They will understand the concept better with picture representation: what the Equator may look like if the Earth could be seen in its entirety, and then check off which one is accurate on a flat world map.
Want to help your child brush up on world history lessons? Kids Academy offers a fun social studies worksheet on Ancient Egyptian rulers. From King Tut to Queen Cleopatra, they'll learn about famous Egyptian rulers not found in modern times. The activity includes a brief description followed by true/false questions. Give it a try and see just how much your child knows!
Silent letters can be tricky for kids learning to read and write. Show them how they work with words like 'knee' and 'dumb'. Then, challenge them to come up with their own. Give them a worksheet with silent letters and trace the lines to join the letters into words.
Help your kids learn proper pronunciation by counting syllables. Most words they'll encounter have 1-3 syllables, making them simple to say. Have them repeat the words in your worksheet after you. Focus on longer words with more than two syllables.
Explain prefixes (words added to start of another word to give it a new meaning) and suffixes (added to end of word to change its meaning) to your kids with examples like 'unhappy' (prefix) and 'forgetful' (suffix). Now, help your child complete this worksheet, including circling words and checking boxes.
Most English words are borrowed, and prefixes and suffixes are added to change the meaning. A popular prefix is 'act', from the Greek root meaning 'to do'. With your kids, look at the words in this worksheet and circle those with the root 'act'.
Point to each image on this worksheet, asking your child what it is. Read the 2 options then help your child trace the line to the correct word. It'll keep them engaged and provide visual stimulation.
Draw up memories of sunny beach days with your child. Ask them to tell you their favourite activities, objects seen. Read the words in the picture aloud and help them count the syllables. Then check the box with the right number of syllables.
Reading short stories to your students builds a bond, teaches new words and lessons. Read the story aloud and then have them listen for details. Ask them the questions at the bottom and help them check the answers.
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!
Ask your kids what a synonym is, and listen to their definitions. If needed, explain it's a word that has a similar meaning to another. Give examples, then ask them to do the same. For this worksheet, get them to help grade the papers. Have them check the boxes if the words are synonyms.
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.