Help your kids identify adverbs with a fun worksheet. Read the words aloud and ask them to circle the adverbs showing 'where.' Give them easy examples, like 'the girl stood over there.' See if they can create their own examples. This activity makes learning adverbs fun!
Adults often struggle to remember the rules for placement of question marks with quotation marks. This practice worksheet can help build the writing conventions needed.
Before you start this worksheet, make sure your kids know about suffixes. Explain that they're added to the end of words to change their meaning. In the worksheet, kids will learn about the suffixes –ful and –less. Look at the sentences in the picture with them, and help them to choose the right one for each blank.
Constructing sentences follows rules. Parts of speech like nouns, verbs, adverbs, pronouns, and prepositions help. This worksheet focuses on prepositions. Explain prepositions to your child, then examine the pictures together and help them complete the sentences.
Contractions are popular in English and make writing/reading easier. For example: I'm, they're, she's. Ask your students to give more examples. Then, read the sentences in this worksheet and help them check the correct contraction to replace the words in bold.