Weather can be dangerous, so teach your kids to stay safe with this interactive weather worksheet. Review the descriptions of tornadoes, blizzards, floods, and drought and match them with the colorful pictures. Tick the boxes to correctly identify each image and complete the sheet.
Let kids explore plants' growth stages with this fun plant life cycle worksheet! They'll strengthen their sequencing skills by ordering the cycle from seed to flower. Make the learning experience even more memorable by growing a flower afterward.
This free PDF provides a simple and fun way to understand the roles of authors and illustrators for beginning readers. It offers concrete pictures of what each one does and traceable lines for children to decide whether they are an author or an illustrator. It will help build their critical thinking skills and foster a better understanding of the book-making process.
Help your child advance their reading skills with Kids Academy! Get your little learner to look at the boy and his canine pal, then have them read the sentence and pick the right sight word from the word bank. Practicing this way can help improve fluency and further reading skills.
Encourage your students to count objects in this colorful worksheet. Ask them to circle the correct answers from the options given. See how much their counting skills have improved with your guidance. Have fun!
Show your kids a picture of Harry the Postman and ask if they can identify his profession. Then, with this simple picture graph worksheet, help Harry out by having your kids answer the questions below the picture graph. It shows the number of letters he delivered, and on what day. Get your kids to use the picture graph to solve it.
Read the short story in the worksheet with your kids. Show them the pictures representing the sentences, then ask the questions and help them circle the correct answer. Make sure they are actually paying attention and learning from the stories.
Teachers help students understand and recognize why authors choose different points of view. This worksheet focuses on first person point of view and its pronouns (I, me and my). Students will read a story, then circle each first-person pronoun. Through this activity, they'll practice identifying the POV in a text.
Can your child rhyme a fox? Listen carefully and see if it's sun, beans, or ox! Help your child recognize rhymes with a pencil or crayon maze. Travel from the dog to the picture that rhymes. This worksheet builds pre-reading skills - a great way to learn!