Have your students practice identifying face parts with this fun worksheet. Teach them how to say eyes, nose, mouth, and ears. Help them master these words so they can express themselves better. And have some fun with the monster coloring page too!
This free worksheet encourages students to learn Spanish words while developing visual, fine motor, and hand-eye coordination skills. Through colorful pictures and traceable lines, the task of finding words such as gato, libro, casa, and fiesta is disguised as a fun and engaging way to explore new cultures.
Help our adorable dog by completing the word he's holding a flag for! Use the picture as a clue to read the word. This PDF worksheet will help early learners with pre-reading and phonics skills. For an added challenge, have your child write the word on the page near the path they drew. Be sure to talk about what the long vowel A sounds like for the best results.
Kids will love this exercise! Get their imaginations going with five colorful picture books. Ask them to circle the books that are picture books and have them enjoy the exciting stories, along with the colorful images. Reading can become that much more enjoyable!
Kids can learn about citizenship and their place in the world by studying their communities. This free worksheet is a fun way to do it - kids match pictures to what they find in their local community. They can trace the lines to show where they would spot the objects. It's an excellent way to get to know their environment!
Kids must learn the rules of past tenses to speak English correctly. This worksheet helps them understand irregular past tense verbs. As they search for them, ask them to read the words aloud; this reinforces the learning.
Expose your child to common high-frequency words with this free and colorful worksheet. It will help them use picture clues to choose the correct word for each phrase. The more they're exposed, the stronger their fluency will become when reading. This process is an important part of the emerging reader's learning-to-read journey.
Introduce your child to economics with this social studies worksheet! It helps kids differentiate between goods and services. Have them look at each picture, discuss what it does, and decide whether it's an object or a service. Encourage them to think carefully and circle the goods. It's a great way to start teaching the basics of economics.
Ask your students what their parents do for a job. Do they know what profession their mom is in and where she works? Professionals have places they go to do their job. In this task, Mom goes to a hospital and is a doctor. Read the text and help them check the right pictures.
Decorate with Kids Academy this year! Keep kids learning this holiday season with this festive worksheet. Let them look for sight words on Christmas trees then circle the matching ornament to decorate. It's a fun and educational way to enjoy the holidays!
Teach your students about "tired" and "worried" with this worksheet. Have them read and color the emotion words, then color the pictures of a tired girl and a worried girl. Discuss what makes them tired and worried. Expand their vocabulary with this fun coloring activity!
Teaching kids words in foreign tongues? Use picture clues to help them build connections for deeper learning! This PDF worksheet uses the three little pigs story to teach French words for three, pigs and wolf. Kids can make picture-word associations and follow traceable lines to match the French and English words.
Help your child explore the solar system with our engaging Space Maze: Saturn worksheet! Kids can trace words, use logical reasoning, and learn more about Saturn while having fun! This worksheet has it all, helping your child master reading, writing, and reasoning skills while learning about a planet.
This free worksheet features the word 'you' and helps beginning readers practice visual-discriminatory skills. Using traceable lines and different colored words, it's an easy way to reinforce their identification of the word and build fluency.
Let your 3rd grader practice early reading and spelling with this festive Christmas maze! Have fun helping Santa find the fireplace and build fluency skills at the same time. This free worksheet is sure to be a hit and get your child excited for the holidays!
This bright, cheery worksheet helps students practice discerning between mono-syllabic words with similar short vowel sounds. With familiar pictures and bold colors, they'll circle the word that matches each given picture, honing both reading and visual discrimination skills. A great tool for emerging readers!
This fun worksheet uses picture clues and traceable lines to help kids learn neighborhood words. Kids will match the neighborhood pictures to the correct words and practice connecting the two. The bright colors make it a great way for kids to practice understanding the qualities of a neighborhood.
This colorful worksheet helps young readers identify elements of fact and fiction using fun picture clues. They can check off characters who exist in realistic fiction stories, which makes learning the difference between the two genres fun and engaging.
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.
Does your kid love bedtime stories? Test their classic fairytale knowledge with this worksheet! If they mention The Three Little Pigs, they're in luck - this pdf has them answering questions based off the classic fairytale. They'll check the picture that answers each question about the story. Is their fairytale knowledge up to scratch?
Confused by the long E sound's varying spellings? Give students practice with this printable. It will improve their reading and spelling skills by helping them identify the correct spellings for words with the /ee/ and /ea/ vowel teams. Clear up the confusion and sharpen their skills.
This tracing worksheet is a fun way to teach little ones that learning can be fun! Ask them to name the five images on the left and then read the words on the right. Do they match? Help them trace the line connecting the picture to the word that matches. Learning doesn't have to mean stuffy classrooms and drudgery!
Practice decoding the /aw/ digraph with this printable. Students read sentences and select the word with the correct spelling to complete each one. Note, /aw/ is sometimes spelled /au/, so this worksheet helps prevent confusion. Have fun, and practice hard!
This worksheet offers kids practice reading sight words in a story. With picture clues and repetitive wording, they'll work with words that can't be sounded out to reinforce their learning. This is an important step in the reading process that helps kids become more confident readers.