Geometry can be daunting for kids, but you can make it easy with simple exercises and familiar objects. Check out this worksheet with two sections of questions. Guide your kids to read clues and check the correct answer box. Help them become better at solving geometry problems.
Help your preschooler get started with math skills while having fun with this shape tracing worksheet featuring a cute robot! Ask them to study the first image, trace the dotted lines to draw the shapes in the second, and color the third. With this activity, they'll learn shapes while enjoying the funny robot pictures!
Ask your child if they know halves and fourths. If not, explain that halves are when a shape is divided into two equal parts and fourths is when a shape is divided into four equal parts. Look through this worksheet with your child and let them trace the dotted lines to the correct answer to show whether the shapes are cut into halves or fourths.
Before starting this worksheet, ask your kids what shapes they know and point out the 2D and 3D shapes on it. Help your kids trace the 2D shapes and then match them to the 3D versions. It'll be a fun new world for your kids to explore!
This worksheet is a fun way to teach toddlers shapes and colors! It has them match buttons on adorable racoon characters. Encourage your child to note the shape and color of the buttons then sort through and circle the matches. This helps build important attention to detail skills!
Introduce your students to the 4 most common shapes: squares, triangles, rectangles and circles. When they progress, show them other shapes like rhombuses and parallelograms. Use this matching shapes worksheet to help them match two identical shapes. Print out the worksheet and instruct them to draw lines connecting them.
Ask your child if they know what faces of shapes are. If not, explain that faces are flat surfaces on shapes. Ask what a square and rectangle have in common - both have four faces. Your child's task is to circle shapes with more than 1 and less than 6 faces in this exercise.
Help your child read each sentence in this colorful worksheet. Have them identify the shapes described and check the boxes. To prepare, ask simple questions like "How many sides does a triangle have?" and "Which shape has 4 equal sides?" Your child will become more skilled at shapes by the end of this activity.
Test your child's ability to copy with this worksheet. Ask them to find and name the four shapes on the left. Then, they must match each with the dotted lines on the right. Help your child with all four shapes in this fun exercise.
This worksheet gives 3rd graders the basics of geometry. Kids match everyday objects to shapes they know, e.g. an orange to a circle, a square to a slice of watermelon and a rectangle to a picture frame. It's a fun way to give them confidence to tackle more complex geometry in the future.
Creating shapes from other shapes (composing shapes) develops spatial skills, an essential geometry standard for young students. This worksheet introduces familiar square objects, then demonstrates how they create rectangles. Students practice tracing and then drawing the shape independently. Download this free math resource for the classroom today! (80 words)
Introduce your students to shapes if they aren't familiar. Look at the sheet with them and ask them to identify shapes. Help them match each shape to its name, then trace the dotted lines to the answers. Even if they haven't seen shapes before, this exercise will be easy - with your help!
Show your child how to divide a whole shape, like a square, into smaller pieces to become fractions. Point out when a shape is divided into two equal parts, it's called a half. Look at the worksheet together, and identify all rectangles that are cut in half (½).