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!
Test your students' understanding of sentences with this easy worksheet. Ask them to read the sentences and circle the correct word that starts each. This will show how well their lessons have paid off and if they can construct short simple sentences.
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!
Let your child help the chef! In this fun kitchen-themed worksheet, have them read and match each word with its picture. With words like measuring cup, apron, and oven, it will boost their reading and help them understand the meaning of the words. Ask them to recall how they have used any of these items in their own kitchen.
This worksheet uses the beloved childhood fable "The Ant and the Grasshopper" to teach your child about plot and order of events. Your child must read the events and put them in the right order. Once completed, review the story with your child to ensure its accuracy.
Help your child explore the principles of American life and history with this Declaration of Independence word search PDF! It contains important keywords that signal The Founding Fathers' intentions for the USA.
Help your kids understand matter's three forms - solid, liquid, and gas - with examples. Ask them to give their own and where to find them. Then, read and discuss the worksheet's facts about solids. Afterward, have them circle the solids among the provided objects.
Children will love this fairytale about a princess trying to get to the royal ball. With colorful images and context clues, they'll learn Italian words without even realizing it. They'll fill in the correct boxes and help Cenerentola get to her happily-ever after. This free worksheet will delight and teach at once!
Help your kids learn about the different times of day and when events occur using this worksheet. Ask them to look at the pictures and determine which box shows when the story happened. Then, discuss how they can use this knowledge to better describe events that occur.
Kids are often fascinated by dinosaurs, creatures that roamed the Earth before man. Sadly, they are now extinct. To learn more, read facts on this worksheet to your kids and help them answer the question at the end by selecting the correct option.
If your kids love poems, get them to recite some to you or have them write their own. Use this worksheet to help them find words that rhyme. Read the short poems and have them check the highlighted words for rhyming.
Ask your kids: "What are homophones?" Explain that homophones are words that sound alike but have different meanings, like 'dare' and 'deer'. Ask them to identify homophones by putting the crayons in this printout away according to the words.
This PDF worksheet entertains while helping kids build language skills! Using funny illustrations and context clues, they'll pick the right prefix (DIS, IM, UN) to complete the root words. It's a fun way to practice and expand your child's vocabulary.
This worksheet tests phonetics and word recognition. Students should be familiar with past tense verbs. Read incomplete sentences, then read multiple options and help students select the correct one.
Help your students gain confidence in family vocabulary with this worksheet. Labelled images of a family (dad, mom, sister, brother) are featured, along with an accompanying activity to colour in the picture. Your students will feel a sense of accomplishment after reading and completing the printable.
Teaching reading? This worksheet can help! Students read the word and draw a line to the picture for clues if needed. This will boost their vocabulary and fluency, increasing confidence and reading skills. Watch their progress as new words are added!
This fun sight words worksheet uses pictures to offer clues that help kids figure out the correct spelling of family, horse, house, and play! Kids read each sentence, then fill in the blanks with the right words. Adorable and educational!
Assist your child in mastering prepositions by printing off this worksheet featuring three sight words: upon, around, off. Read the sentences aloud and use the illustrations to demonstrate the meaning of each. Your kid will soon master these words quickly.
Kids as young as preschool-age can be taught to evaluate stories! Use this fun worksheet about a day at the park. Read each sentence aloud, looking at the pictures. Ask your child if the events in the story could happen in real life - if yes, circle yes, otherwise circle no. When finished, discuss with them the genre, realistic fiction.
Read the poem to your child and point out where each stanza ends. Ask if they know what a stanza is (if not, explain it's a group of lines in a poem). Help them answer the question at the bottom of the printout. This simple, sweet poem about cats is easy for your child to relate to.
This worksheet can help your children become better readers. By now, you should have an idea of their reading level. Read the incomplete sentences aloud and point to the missing piece. Have your students pick the correct word they think best fits the sentence out of the options given.
Help your students figure out the plural nouns in Lilliana's checklist. Look at the six objects in this PDF and add 's' to the nouns to make them plural. Show students how words can be tricky and explain how adding an 's' often changes the noun to its plural form.
You need characters, theme, POV, plot and setting to tell a good story. Ask your kids to explain them and use this worksheet with a story to teach them about setting. Read the story with your kids, then have them circle the picture that best shows the setting.