This fun printout with colorful illustrations will assess how much your kids pay attention to story time. Go through the pictures and help them circle the ones that match each part of the story. Stimulate their brains and have fun in the process!
Go through the worksheet with your child and ask which children are being rude or polite. Check the boxes for the polite children. Explain how to be well-behaved in school by following the examples of polite children. Help your child better their behaviour in school and the community.
Ask your kids if they know what suffixes are, and explain they are words added to the end of another word which changes the meaning. This worksheet focuses on the suffix -ed which shows something already happened. Help the kid in the picture find the past tense words.
Read to your kids often and look at the pictures of books and poems in this worksheet. Guide them by reading aloud each book and poem. Make sure they are paying attention and help them check the pictures. This is a great way for your kids to learn to read properly.
Help your littlest learners practice punctuation with a fun activity! Read sentences with them and have them color in the accompanying aliens. After, ask them to read each sentence again, slowly and carefully, making sure to pause between each word. This humorous worksheet will not only make them smile, but it will also help them master a vital part of good writing.
Many animals survive by either migrating or hibernating when the weather changes. Migration involves traveling in flocks or herds to a more temperate climate, while hibernation is when animals stay in their homes and eat and sleep for a long period of time. Show your kids this worksheet and help them decide which strategy animals use to cope with the changing weather.
Science has a big impact on our world, and teaching kids about weather helps them understand how their learning applies to their lives. Our worksheet reviews different types of weather, so kids can look out the window and know what's happening. It covers familiar types of precipitation and more challenging ones like sleet or hail. Kids can use this to build a mental library of scientific knowledge for the future, even from places that don't get much snow.
This worksheet is great for assessing your child's counting skills. It's a bit more challenging than the usual 'count to fifty' exercises. Have them trace the lines and skip count by 10's to help them learn counting in tens.