Kids love tadpoles! They'll have fun using them to work out the measurements of their frog friends. By dividing the length of the frogs by the length of the tadpoles, children can deduce how many tadpoles it takes to equal a frog. With the use of 'how many' and 'each' they'll solve math problems without realizing it!
Have your students count the school supplies in each picture. Underline the number sentence that matches. Ask them if the total number is odd or even. Help your eager little preschoolers explore their classroom, which is full of pencils, chairs, desks, a blackboard and the teacher's desk.
Farming is tough, so help your mathematician out with this fun and stimulating worksheet! They'll read word problems and connect each to its correct picture, using traceable lines. They'll practice addition with three addends, and use the harvest veg pictures to ensure accuracy.
By now, your child should be able to count up to the hundreds. If they're still learning the tens, that's okay - as long as they're going at their own pace. This worksheet will be easy if they can count to ten. Ask them to trace the lines and skip count by 5's.
If your child is having trouble with math, worksheets like this can help them get more practice. Addition, subtraction, and multiplication go together. Look over each addition equation and pick the matching multiplication equation, then circle the correct answer. This can give your child the necessary practice to understand mathematics better.
It's important to use fun scenarios with familiar objects when teaching kids. Try discussing train rides and the accompanying picture graph. Ask questions about it, then help kids check the correct answers. Let them enjoy the learning process!
Explain to your kids an invertebrate is an animal without a backbone. Examples: squid, jellyfish, octopus. Now, look at the starfish in the picture and help your kids circle the correct facts.
Get your kids to pay attention to learning with familiar objects, bright colors, and this worksheet. It has six arrays - ask kids to identify them and count the objects. Then, help them trace a line to the correct equation.