Ask your child what the building you live in is called. Is it a home, restaurant or hospital? Then look at the pictures in the worksheet and ask them to identify which are homes - even if they don't look like yours. Check the box next to the homes in the pictures.
Kids can have trouble understanding measurement, like the differences between heavy and light. This worksheet helps them associate full with heavy and empty with light, using familiar images. Plus, it's a fun way to practice fine motor skills, tracing the lines to connect the pictures.
Understanding math word problems is key. Multiple steps can prove challenging - this free worksheet provides one-to-one picture representation to help kids solve multi-step addition word problems. Strengthen addition skills by choosing the matching picture to the answer.
Students will have fun comparing basic shapes to familiar objects with this worksheet. It's an excellent way to help them recognize similarities in geometric shapes, building strong foundations for understanding congruence and similarity.
It's your duty as a teacher to protect, direct and guide your students while they're at school. Ask your kindergartners what a home means and why it's special. Use this worksheet to teach them that both people and animals have homes. Show them the pictures, and have them check off which is the home of each animal.
Introduce your child to 3D and 2D with this traceable worksheet. With dotted lines, help them trace and make a 2D shape for each 3D shape: square, triangle, rectangle, and circle. Show them there's more than one way to draw! You may have taken them to a 3D movie, or they've seen some fantastic 3D art. Now they can wonder no more.
Learning the short and long «e» sound can be tricky for kids just starting to learn the alphabet. Make it fun with this worksheet: it leads your kindergarten child to a hen's nest by following words with the short «e» sound. They'll be able to identify words with the sound by the end of the exercise.
Critical thinking is essential for reading comprehension. New readers must be able to identify the key information in different text formats. This worksheet helps children learn what they might find in cities and how to differentiate between stories and pictures.
Do your kids cycle? Chris is a cyclist practicing on a ramp. Look at the pictures with them and decide if Chris is above or below the ramp. It's an important skill to help your kids become fluent speakers and writers - using the right words to describe something. Cycling is a fun sporting event.
Let students get to grips with the concepts of empty and full with this PDF worksheet. It uses fun, bright pictures to help them comprehend the difference and also helps develop fine-motor skills with tracing lines. Kids will be proud of themselves as they get answers right!