Drawing straight lines
The drawing activity in this early writing worksheet helps your child create fluid straight lines across the page. Bonus: your child's scribbles will create shapes to color in.
Editing
Editing is an important step that follows writing. In this language arts worksheet, your child gets practice deleting extra or unneccessary words and then rewriting the new, shorter sentences.
Fiction and nonfiction
Which book looks like fiction? In this reading worksheet, your child learns to identify whether books are fiction or nonfiction based on their covers and titles.
Find the pictures
There's a hidden picture in this early reading worksheet that your child will discover by coloring in puzzle pieces that have rhyming words on them.
Find the pictures #2
Finding key points
In this reading worksheet, your child will read a short informational passage and then underline key points and answer questions about the language and content of the passage.
Following instructions
Can you do this experiment? In this worksheet, your child will read the instructions, put them in order by creating a flow chart, organize the elements of the experiment - and then do the experiment and write a report about it. Bonus: your child will do a little research to compare the experiment results with information from reference books or the internet.
Homophones
Write or right? In this language arts worksheet, your child will look up sets of homophones to learn the definitions of the all the like-sounding (but differently spelled) words.
Homophones and homographs
Homophones are words that sound the same but are spelled differently and have a different meaning. Homographs are words that sound the same and are spelled the same but have a different meaning. In this language arts worksheet, your child will fill in the missing homophones to complete pre-written sentences and then write sentences to convey each homograph's alternate meaning.
Homophones: fun with puns
Puns are jokes that rely on homophones for their humor. In this writing worksheet, your child will write homophones for 24 words and then use those words to write puns.
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