Help your preschooler get started with math skills while having fun with this shape tracing worksheet featuring a cute robot! Ask them to study the first image, trace the dotted lines to draw the shapes in the second, and color the third. With this activity, they'll learn shapes while enjoying the funny robot pictures!
This worksheet gives 3rd graders the basics of geometry. Kids match everyday objects to shapes they know, e.g. an orange to a circle, a square to a slice of watermelon and a rectangle to a picture frame. It's a fun way to give them confidence to tackle more complex geometry in the future.
Download this fun PDF to help your kiddos recognize basic shapes like circles, squares, and triangles. It'll sharpen their fine motor skills as they trace and sort shapes by color, size, and sides. Your kids won't even realize they're learning with these cheery shapes!
Introduce your students to the 4 most common shapes: squares, triangles, rectangles and circles. When they progress, show them other shapes like rhombuses and parallelograms. Use this matching shapes worksheet to help them match two identical shapes. Print out the worksheet and instruct them to draw lines connecting them.
Help your child identify shapes by having them find shapes made up of equal parts. This colorful worksheet challenges them to look through each row and circle two matching shapes. It's a great way to teach them the unique features of each shape, while also helping them understand that identical shapes can look different.
Using food and snacks to stimulate learning and interest in topics is a great strategy. Fractions can prove tricky, but this worksheet can help your child become an expert. Have them look for the missing parts of the food to make a whole, then circle the answer.
Before beginning, ensure your child is familiar with quadrilaterals (4 sides) and triangles (3 sides). This tracing exercise is easy: sort the shapes into the two groups and trace the dotted lines to the correct group.
Can your child identify and name shapes? Help them learn the unique features of each and have them check the correct name for each group in the colorful pictures on this worksheet.
Time to test your child's shape knowledge! With this worksheet, help them find the odd shape out in each row and check the box under it. Print out the pdf and look through it with them – each row has four brightly colored shapes. See if they can spot any differences among them and then check the box below the shape that does not belong.
This fun and colorful worksheet will help your child understand and identify quadrilaterals. It's simple and encourages them to draw lines to create a square, rectangle, rhombus, trapezoid, and parallelogram. Stimulate their minds and watch them learn while they have fun!
Before beginning, ask your child what the object in the picture is, the sound it makes and where it can be found. If they know, confidently move on. Help them make the second train look like the first by tracing dotted lines. Hold their hand for guidance.
Your students' goal in this worksheet is to find the twin shapes: drawing a line between two shapes made of the same parts. Likely, the first shapes encountered were circles, triangles, rectangles and squares - examples of which are seen frequently in everyday life. Encourage them to apply what they know and work out which is the twin shape!
This worksheet can help your kids test their knowledge of shapes. They should have already been introduced to the most common shapes and be able to identify and draw them. Look at the picture and help your child identify each shape. Then, check which one isn't used to make the object.
Prior to starting this worksheet, quiz your kid on shapes. If they gave quite a few, you've done well! This pdf will teach them more about cones; show them the pictures in the printout and have them identify which ones contain a cone.
Explain to your kids that 3D shapes are the view from another angle, offering depth, height and width. This worksheet encourages them to match the 3D shapes to their 2D form. They can circle the flat shapes that match the 3D shapes in the printout.
It's John's birthday and he needs your help. Ask your kids to draw a line from each present to the matching 3D shape. First, check they understand the difference between 2D and 3D shapes. Then, they can help John figure out which 3D shape matches each present.
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.
Ask your child if they know halves and fourths. If not, explain that halves are when a shape is divided into two equal parts and fourths is when a shape is divided into four equal parts. Look through this worksheet with your child and let them trace the dotted lines to the correct answer to show whether the shapes are cut into halves or fourths.
Before starting, ask your child if they understand what halves and fourths are. If they can answer correctly, move on with the worksheet. Help them circle the right option beside each shape, showing if it's split into halves or fourths.
Introduce Little Sunshine to your students. Help them to cut rectangles into two or four equal parts by tracing the dotted lines. It's easy - the lines divide them evenly. Encourage your students to help Little Sunshine complete the task!
Ask your child if they know what faces of shapes are. If not, explain that faces are flat surfaces on shapes. Ask what a square and rectangle have in common - both have four faces. Your child's task is to circle shapes with more than 1 and less than 6 faces in this exercise.
Help your kids explore their pirate fantasies with this tracing sheet. Ask them to count the number of faces in each jewel and then trace the dotted line to the correct number. How many faces does a rectangle have? What about a triangle and a cone? This fun worksheet is a great way to teach your kids the basics of identifying the number of faces on shapes.
Help the wizard count the faces of 3D shapes! Ask your kids to identify the shapes before beginning, then have them circle the correct number of faces. Enjoy this fun wizard-themed worksheet with your kids!
Help your child read each sentence in this colorful worksheet. Have them identify the shapes described and check the boxes. To prepare, ask simple questions like "How many sides does a triangle have?" and "Which shape has 4 equal sides?" Your child will become more skilled at shapes by the end of this activity.