Fiction writing is made up of characters and events created by the author. Ask your students to match the captions to the picture. Help your preschoolers explore the contents of a non-fiction book that may have the same photo.
If your kids are interested in protecting the planet, they should know about the Amazon. Use this worksheet to teach them about it. Read it with them and help them find the cause and effect relationships, then check them off. It explains the situation in the Amazon, why it's happening and the results.
Help your students read and identify the parts of the story in this worksheet: the beginning (characters and setting), middle (major events), and ending (events are resolved). Show them how to structure a story for clarity.
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.
Help your kids figure out the author's purpose when they read something. In this worksheet, there are three descriptions; they must identify the author's purpose and circle it from the options provided. Doing this will help them to get correct information from what they read.
Young gardeners and scientists can learn about what helps plants grow with this fun PDF worksheet. Kids will trace lines to practice left-to-right patterning and use pictures from the rebus story to guide them. Learn that plants need sunshine, water and soil, then check off pictures of what each plant needs. It's an engaging and educational way to help their plants become big and strong.
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!
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.
Pictures are key elements of informational texts. Sometimes, captions are added to describe them. Help your child improve their reading habits and comprehension by teaching them about captions. This worksheet introduces the concept, then asks questions to assess your child's understanding.
Read the Three Little Pigs to your children. Have them use the tracing sheet to connect the story words with the pictures. This is a fun and educational way to help them build their vocabulary.