This PDF provides a fun way for students to learn "Hola" (Hello) in Spanish! Kids can practice fine motor and handwriting skills while they trace the letters. They'll get the hang of top-to-bottom, left-to-right patterning while they learn how to say and write in Spanish. With practice, they'll soon feel confident speaking and writing Spanish!
Searching for free worksheets to help your kids refine their motor skills, handwriting and English word knowledge? Get this cheerful PDF! It offers your children the chance to practice tracing words like Hello, while following a top-to-bottom, left-to-right patterning.
This fun and cheery worksheet helps kids explore different cultures and how people greet each other around the world. With colorful pictures and clues, they'll check off greetings from different countries and learn more about the world.
Students can explore global cultures through this fun PDF worksheet. It introduces Korean children and a Korean festival. Students can choose the children's clothing using traceable lines. It's essential for our globally connected students to learn about different traditions, clothing, foods and cultures of other countries.
Young students often don't get to practice cardinal and intercardinal directions in the digital age, but it's an important social studies and geography concept to learn. This PDF provides colorful compasses for them to practice with, giving them a real-world skill for common curriculum and independent living.
Learning the difference between maps and globes can be difficult for young children. Get this free worksheet to help them! It offers word and picture clues for them to practice matching. They'll also get to use their fine motor skills as they trace the lines to find the answers.
Teach students to celebrate diversity! This free worksheet lets them explore Indian traditional dances, costumes and jewelry. They'll discover Kathak and Odissi, while practicing motor skills tracing the matching lines. Give them a glimpse into the global community!
Exploring different countries' music is a great way for global learners to appreciate their place in the world. This worksheet helps them match music - like Salsa and Irish Folk - to various geographic regions with colorful visuals. It boosts reading comprehension while supporting their cultural understanding.
This colorful worksheet offers a great opportunity to learn about traditional Mexican foods, build vocabulary and practice visual discrimination. As many of the words are not phonetic, this practice can help improve fluency, vocabulary and comprehension when encountered in reading. Culturally diverse, it's great for readers looking to expand their knowledge.
Help your young historians reinforce their knowledge of the U.S. with this fun, free PDF worksheet! It'll assess their understanding of the fifty states and strengthen their visual discrimination skills too - they'll pick out the correct answers, with colorful word-coding. Give it a try!
Help your little geographer get to know the U.S. rivers and lakes! This PDF shows various primary lakes and rivers across the country and helps them differentiate between them. It also introduces them to cardinal directions while they answer questions about proximities and identify well-known geographical landmarks.
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.
Kids likely already know how to play hopscotch. Ask them to show you the shortest, tallest and middle child in the worksheet. Then, help them order them from shortest to tallest by checking the boxes.
Look at the pictures in this worksheet with kids. Can they tell if the actions are fair or unfair? Help them decide and circle the appropriate option. When something causes harm to one person, it is unfair; when all parties benefit, it is fair.
Show your kid the pictures in this worksheet. Ask them to tell you what they see and who needs help with the task. Then, have them draw a line between the person and the one who can help. Explain to them that cooperation is very important to complete tasks quickly and easily. Ask what they do to cooperate in different places.
Cooperation is an essential component of successful teamwork - in school, in offices, with citizens. Ask your students to check the pictures in the worksheet showing citizens working together. This is what makes a good citizen: cooperation.
Kids who love geography will enjoy this worksheet. On the printout there's a map. Show your child the landmarks and read them aloud. Have them take note of the locations. Then, ask them to answer the questions at the bottom using the map; check the answers.
Test your child's knowledge of flags and symbols with this worksheet. Learning which symbol belongs to which country can be tricky. Make it simpler for your kids by having them start with a few at a time. Download the pdf and ask them to name the countries on the left; then help them check the box to match the country and its symbol.
In the U.S., there are three tiers of government: legislative (makes laws), executive (enforces laws), and judicial (reviews laws). Have your child use the worksheet to connect each branch with its role.
State and city governments have departments that each have special tasks. Ask your kids what local departments do and look at the picture with them to check the correct department box.
Encourage your children to learn more about your country's leaders. Ask them if they can name your mayor or state's governor. Explain that mayors lead cities, while governors lead states. Read the descriptions out loud to them, and help them identify if it's a mayor or a governor.
Encourage your kids to discuss their rights as citizens. Help them recognize fundamental human rights they're entitled to. Review the worksheet: ask them to read aloud and draw a line to the right picture. Invite them back to the discussion to explain their choices. Each step will help them understand and exercise their rights.
Explain to your child why people go to jail. Show them this worksheet; it illustrates the stages a criminal goes through from breaking the law to receiving their punishment. Guide them in connecting the circles from the big red dot. Finish with a discussion on why it's important to follow the law.
Encourage your students to think about the laws they abide by - at home, school, and the playground. Explain the importance of laws in keeping us safe, then ask them to check the box next to the pictures depicting different laws in a worksheet.