Enhance your child's reading and spelling with this ou and ow words worksheet! Fun pictures and common words make mastering the diphthongs ou and ow easy and enjoyable.
Help students learn geography and math, with this worksheet. Examine the graph and ask your students questions. Have them answer using the graph and addition/subtraction exercises. This can help them name continents, countries, and animals unique to each.
Test your child's picture identification skills by pointing at common items in your house and asking them to name them. Then, look at the objects in this worksheet with your little one. Point at each one, ask for the name, then ask which spelling is correct. Help them circle the correct word.
This fun word search worksheet helps kids practice reading irregular words and build their sight word banks. They'll also get practice with visual discrimination and fine motor skills as they hunt down the words.
Learning to read can be tricky, especially with words with irregular pronunciations. Explain to your child that some words have consonants we do not pronounce when reading. Ask them for examples like 'knife' and 'knob'. These consonants are called silent letters. Download this pdf to practice words with silent letters and complete the maze.
Trouble spelling words with the same initial vowel sound? Our worksheet is here to help! With its exercises to help your child learn to read and spell turtle, bird, and mermaid, it'll make differentiating these tricky digraphs a snap.
Tracing is essential for kids to learn good handwriting and boost their fine motor skills. This handwriting worksheet lets kids trace the word "black" letter by letter using a black crayon and spot all the black items. With this free printable, they'll have fun while writing! For more practice, check out the link.
Help your child get a jumpstart on reading with sight words! Print out this fun worksheet and get your child to read the sentence. Point out the word "and", then color the word and enjoy the rest of the scene! It's a great way to introduce sight words and get their early reading skills going!