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Kindergarten Worksheets

Introduce your kindergarten students to the joys of learning with worksheets that focus on foundational skills. Covering topics like phonics, counting, and basic science, these resources make education exciting. Use them to support your young students' growth and enthusiasm.

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2D Shapes Dot Painting Worksheets

2D Shapes Dot Painting Worksheets
Math, Geometry, Kindergarten, Preschool, Grade 1, Worksheets, Worksheets & Printables

With these shape dot painting pages, students can practice forming 2D shapes by using cotton swabs. These dot painting pages provide a new, fun and unique way for preschoolers and kindergartners to practice recognizing different 2D shapes. The hands on nature of these dotting pages allow students to stay engaged as they learn about each 2D shape. What is Included: Each shape worksheet features the shape's name at the bottom for students to read or trace. The are 13 different shapes in this packet: rectangle, square, circle, oval, trapezoid, triangle, pentagon, hexagon, octagon, rhombus, diamond, heart and star. There are two different sets of shape dot painting pages. One dot painting page lets students trace the shape's name and the other simply names the shape. How to Use: Students will use cotton swabs to dot the perimeter of each 2D shape. If cotton swabs are not available, or the teacher wishes to use a different method, students can use their fingers to dot each circle or small stickers to cover each dot. Where to Use: Math or Art Center - Simply place these pages with cotton swabs and paint in the desired center for students to complete. Morning Work - These worksheets are perfect for students to work on while they wait for the rest of their classmates arrive to class. Quiet Time Activity - This is a great activity for non-nappers in a pre-k room to work on while their classmates sleep. Sub plans - These are great worksheets to leave for a sub, as they are easy to assign and students will love completing this activity ! Skills Assessed: These dot painting pages allow students to identify each 2D shape as well as practice fine motor skills while placing dots to outline each shape. These pages also assess the student's ability to to trace letters to spell each shape's name. More Shape Activities 2D and 3D Shape Sorting Activity Apple Shapes Sorting Mats

Author The Connett Connection

Tags 2D Shapes, Math Center, Shapes Dot Painting, Dot Painting, Geometry

Pencil Control Tracing Worksheets for Pre-K & Kindergarten Pre-Writing

Pencil Control Tracing Worksheets for Pre-K & Kindergarten Pre-Writing
Montessori, Handwriting, Writing, ELA, Numbers, Early Math, Math, Shapes, Patterns, Kindergarten, Preschool, Toddler, Centers, Activities, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets

Pencil Control and Tracing Worksheets Pre-Writing Practice for Preschool, Montessori, & Kindergarten Build strong pre-writing skills with this no-prep pencil control and tracing worksheet pack. I designed it especially for preschool and kindergarten learners. These engaging tracing activities will help children develop fine motor skills, hand-eye coordination, and pencil control , setting the foundation for confident handwriting. With a gentle progression from simple lines to letters and numbers, this resource is perfect for early learners who are just beginning their writing journey. What’s inside? This workbook features a wide variety of grayscale tracing worksheets that are easy on young eyes and ideal for printing. Tracing activities include: Basic Lines: standing lines, sleeping lines, curved lines, and slanting lines Fun shapes and objects: lollipop, quilt, loops, heart-shaped cookie, starfish, kite, balloons, birdhouse, moon, earrings, boat, mat, hat, gift, flags, jellyfish, and a lot more Themed tracing pages: circles, caterpillar, house, train, elephant bath lines, candle, cake etc. Letters and numbers: uppercase A - Z and numbers 1 - 10 Resource features Grayscale: I kept it black and white for clear and distraction-free tracing Engaging themes that keep children motivated and interested Skill-building progression from basic strokes to letters and numbers Versatile use: It is perfect for classrooms, homeschool settings, or one on one practice Age-appropriate activities for preschool and kindergarten students are included in this set How to use it? Tracing practice: Children may trace lines, shapes, and objects to strengthen pencil control Writing readiness: Feel free to introduce letters and numbers through guided tracing Creative learning: In this resource, I have paired up tracing with coloring for added engagement Daily routines: Use these worksheets as warm-ups, morning work, centers, or fine motor practice Early finishers: You can also put these worksheets in your early finishers basket This resource is helpful for: Teachers: It is great for literacy centers, early finishers, and handwriting lessons For Homeschoolers it is a simple way to create a structured pre-writing routine at home Parents will love it as an easy and effective tool for building fine motor skills through fun practice This pencil control and tracing resource helps young learners build confidence as they practice basic lines, shapes, letters, and numbers. With engaging themes and no-prep worksheets, it’s an ideal choice for developing strong fine motor and pre-writing skills in preschool and kindergarten .

Author FlashKart

Rating

Tags Pencil Control, Pre-writing, Tracing, Workbook, Montessori Worksheets, Handwriting, Fine Motor Skills, Shape Tracing, Number Tracing, Curved Lines

Zoo Animal Research Writing Project on ELEPHANTS for K-2nd Grade

Zoo Animal Research Writing Project on ELEPHANTS for K-2nd Grade
Life Studies, ELA, Writing, Creative Writing, Reading, Science, Life Sciences, Animals, Research, Kindergarten, Grade 1, 2, Teacher Tools, Worksheets & Printables, Lesson Plans, Presentations, Worksheets, Coloring Pages, Writing Prompts

Animal Research Writing Project on Elephants for K-2. Engage young students in reading, writing, and science with this 19-page informational writing project on elephants. Students will read fascinating facts, examine real-life photos, color images, draw habitat scenes, organize information with writing organizers, and compose their own informative writing piece on elephants. Three differentiated writing levels are included to accommodate varying abilities. When completed, the project can be bound into a printed book for the classroom or home library. This elephant unit can be implemented in whole groups, small groups, or as an individual student project. Pair it with the 7 other available animal projects for a cross-curricular writing program. Suitable for kindergarten through 2nd grade. Teachers appreciate the ready-to-use animal units covering reading, note-taking, drafting, illustrating, and publishing. Engage your class in meaningful informational writing with this standards-based project on monkeys. Plus, there are many more zoo animals to research as well in my store: K-5 Treasures! For additional Zoo Animal reports, click on the following links below: Animal Research Writing Project on TIGERS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on MONKEYS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on PANDAS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on HIPPOS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on ELEPHANTS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on GIRAFFES for K-2nd Grade Here are even more informational resources on report writing for OCEAN ANIMALS. Click on the links below: Animal Research Writing Project on WHALES for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on the OCTOPUS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on SEA TURTLES for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on ORCAS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on the SHELLFISH for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on DOLPHINS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on SEALS for K-2nd Grade

Author K-5 Treasures

Tags Animal Research, Informational Writing, Writing Report, Zoo Animals, Report On Animals, Report On Zoo Animals, 1st Grade Writing, 2nd Grade Writing, Elephants, Report On Elephants

Letter of the Week Letter C Printables Activity Pack Phonics

Letter of the Week Letter C Printables Activity Pack Phonics
ELA, Phonics, Language Development, Pre-Reading, Kindergarten, Preschool, Homeschool Curriculum, Homeschool Templates, Grade 1, Centers, Activities, Crafts, Coloring Pages, Worksheets, Worksheets & Printables, Crosswords Puzzles, Dot To Dots, Mazes, Word Searches

Looking for a fun and effective way to teach the Letter C ? This Letter of the Week Letter C Activity Pack is loaded with interactive, no-prep printables and engaging Boom Cards that make alphabet learning hands-on and exciting for preschool and kindergarten students. With 86 printable activity pages and 32 digital Boom Cards , your students will gain confidence recognizing, forming, and sounding out both uppercase and lowercase C through a mix of tracing, puzzles, dabbing, coloring, and creative crafts. ✏️ What’s Included: 📄 Printable Worksheets Letter C Poster + 6 Visual Vocabulary Cards Tracing & Writing Uppercase and Lowercase C Spinning, Sorting, Finding, and Coloring Letter C (plus review: A, S, I) Drawing Letter C Pictures & Identifying Initial Sounds (a, s, t, n, p, i, c) Mazes, Dot-to-Dots, Geoboard, and Color by Code Dab the Dots & Visual Cutouts Booklet Cover, 'About Me' Page, & Summary Sheet Fairytale Connection: Cinderella Reading Practice: Word Families – an, ap, at, it, in, ip 🎨 Crafts & Literacy Extras “I’m a Letter C Champ” Crown & Bracelet Mini Flipbook of Letter C Words & Visuals Letter C Word Wheel (6 Visual Vocabulary Sections) One-Page Mini Booklet + Sight Word Flipbook (Touch Phonics Font) Cat -Themed Finger Puppets (6 per page) Stick Puppet Templates (4 per page) 💻 Boom Cards – 32 Digital Activities Formation & Recognition of Uppercase and Lowercase C Letter C Sound & Name Practice Puzzle Matching and Visual Recognition Drag-and-Drop Uppercase/Lowercase Sorting Visual Reveal Game (Letter C Objects) Sentence Use: Capital C vs Lowercase c Culminating Task: Build a Cat Activity 🎯 Perfect For: Letter of the Week Programs Literacy Centers & Phonics Stations Morning Tubs or Early Finishers Homework or At-Home Practice Small Group or 1:1 Instruction ⭐ Bonus: Includes both US and British English spelling to suit all classrooms. Help your students confidently master the Letter C through this engaging mix of print and digital tools—perfect for early literacy growth and alphabet fun!

Author Teach2Tell

Rating

Tags Letter C Activities, Letter Of The Week Letter C, Alphabet Worksheets Letter C, Preschool Letter C Worksheets, Kindergarten Letter C Activities, Letter C Crafts For Kids, Uppercase And Lowercase Letter C, Letter C Phonics Practice, Build A Cat Letter C Activity, Interactive Letter C Phonics Activities

Letter R of the Week Letter R Printables Alphabet Worksheets

Letter R of the Week Letter R Printables Alphabet Worksheets
Common Core, Phonics, Language Development, ELA, Pre-Reading, Kindergarten, Preschool, Homeschool Curriculum, Homeschool Templates, Grade 1, Centers, Activities, Crafts, Coloring Pages, Worksheets, Worksheets & Printables, Crosswords Puzzles, Dot To Dots, Mazes, Word Searches

Make the Letter R roar to life with this fun-filled phonics and handwriting pack! Perfect for preschool and kindergarten learners, this Letter of the Week Letter R Activity Pack includes 86 no-prep printable pages and 30 interactive Boom Cards designed to help students recognize, write, and master uppercase and lowercase R with confidence. From tracing and puzzles to crafts and phonics games, this resource supports early literacy, fine motor development, and letter-sound recognition in an engaging, hands-on way. ✏️ What’s Included: 📄 Printable Worksheets Letter R Poster + 6 Visual Vocabulary Cards Booklet Cover + ‘About Me’ Page Tracing & Writing Uppercase and Lowercase R Sorting, Spinning, and Finding Letter R Drawing Letter R Pictures Letter R Mazes, Dot-to-Dot, Puzzles Dab the Dots, Color by Code, Visual Cutouts Geoboard Activity + Glitter Letter Craft Fairytale Connection: Rapunzel Beginning Sounds Practice for Selected Letters Word Family Practice: a, i, e, an, ap, at, in, ip, it Summary Sheet for Review 🎨 Crafts & Extra Literacy Activities “I’m a Letter R Champ” Crown & Bracelet Mini Flipbook with Letter R Words and Visuals One-Page Mini Word Booklet Sight Word Flipbook Robot-Themed Finger Puppets (6 per page) Stick Puppet Templates (4 per page) Letter R Word Wheel (6 Vocabulary Sections) 💻 Boom Cards – 30 Digital Activities Uppercase & Lowercase R Formation and Recognition Letter R Name and Sound Practice Puzzle Piece Matching (Uppercase/Lowercase) Drag-and-Drop Sorting: Capital vs Lowercase Visual Reveal Game (R Sound Pictures) Sentence Usage: Uppercase R vs Lowercase r 🎯 Perfect For: Letter of the Week Literacy Instruction Morning Work & Centers Small Groups or Intervention Phonics Practice & Fine Motor Skills Homework & Distance Learning ⭐ Bonus: Comes with both US and British English spelling options—ready for any classroom. Build confidence in early learners with this comprehensive Letter R resource that combines creativity, phonics, and skill-building into one easy-to-use bundle.

Author Teach2Tell

Rating

Tags Letter R Activities, Letter Of The Week Letter R, Alphabet Worksheets Letter R, Preschool Letter R Printables, Kindergarten Letter R Activities, Phonics Practice Letter R, Robot Letter R Craft, Interactive Letter R Phonics Activities, Rapunzel Letter R Activity

AI Phonic Worksheets for Early Years/Intervention/Special Needs

AI Phonic Worksheets for Early Years/Intervention/Special Needs
Special Resources, ELA, Language Development, Phonics, Reading, Spelling, Kindergarten, Preschool, Grade 1, 2, Activities, Games, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets

This is a pack of 18 phonic worksheets for the Long Vowel AI (as in rain) specially designed for those with special needs, including those with dyslexia or who may be suspected of being dyslexic but will work equally well with young learners in Kindergarten/EYFS/Y1. A pack of 18 AI worksheets with a variety of exercises to help build phonemic awareness and reading fluency. These sheets are LETRS and UK GOV requirements aligned. These worksheets also align with the most popular phonic programmes, including RWI and Letters and Sounds. What is included? 30 worksheets for the sound AI taking pupils from hearing the sounds in words to reading and spelling them at word and sentence level. all following my special method devised as I privately tutor children of all ages with profound special needs. Your phonics lessons are covered! Tracking, fluency triangles, spelling, reading, games, comprehension exercises....and more! 2 PDF games to send home for extra practice included! Who are these worksheets for? I have written them for pupils who struggle with processing information - especially sounds. This includes children who are DYSLEXIC or have ANY other kind of processing disorder. Such children may have failed with other methods of teaching phonics. Such pupils need activities that: ·are highly structured - one tiny step at a time building on the one before using only a limited number of words to start with and only using words that the child has already learnt to sound out, with no nasty surprises. ·Have only a little on each pageas these pupils tire easily. What makes these worksheets special? I have a powerful three-step process which I use with my special needs pupils, which is worked out over the course of the 18 worksheets: 1. See it!where we focus on becoming aware of the new sound in words. This involves first hearing the new sound in words and then seeing it in words (tracking). 2. Sound-it-out!Having learnt to see the new sound in words, we learn to sound out these words to read and write them. We begin by usingsound-it-out boxesfor reading and spelling which help the child to segment the word prior to blending the sounds together. Once the child can read and write individual words, we work on fluency by building familiarity with the common words in the new sound family. Once the child can sound the words out to read and spell confidently, we move on to recognising them/using them in longer reading and dictation passages, as soon as the child is able. I provide 2 reading passages with comprehension exercises and one dictation passage, with a page in the workbook dedicated to it, with room for a picture, which again cements understanding. 3. Write it! Incorporated into the above two steps, we constantly write the new sound. This adds a multi-sensory dimension to our work - we see with our eyes, we sound it with our mouth parts and voice, and then we move by writing. All three steps work together to help the child feel in control of his/her learning and to become a successful, confident learner. We finish each sound with a dictation which culminates our work before we move on to the next sound. I try to give the dictation a week after we finish the work on the EA sound to act as revision. The dictation: Read this passage to your pupil, who should write it. Have the child read his/her work and check for errors. Make sure the writing is completely accurate before saying the child has finished, including full stops and capital letters correctly used. Flashcards are included of some common AI words. What is included? 1 PDF with flashcards, 2 easy-prep AI games and 30 worksheets

Author Lilibette's Resources

Tags Phonic Worksheets, Special Needs, Phonic Games, Print N Play Phonic Game, Dyslexia, Vowel Teams, Spelling Ai Words, Ai Worksheets, Learn To Read Ai Words, Long A

Guided Reading Level H - Who Cooks for the Community
Free Download

Guided Reading Level H - Who Cooks for the Community
ELA, Resources for Teachers, Reading Comprehension, Reading, Social Emotional Learning (SEL), Special Resources, Career, Life Studies, Social Studies, Economics, Kindergarten, Grade 1, 2, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets, Teacher Tools, Centers, Activities, Literacy Readers, Quizzes, Quizzes and Tests, Assessments

This Guided Reading Book - Who Cooks for the Community (Level H) includes: Guided Reading Color Label (front cover x1) This is a quick way to match the book’s demands to what students can generally handle.. The overall goal is to use the level/color to pick books for several smaller groups. To qualify for a certain level, a student is expected to read a book from that level with about 90–94% accuracy. If a student is consistently accurate and understands, move up a level. If the student is struggling at that level, drop down and add more support. Each student will improve at completely different rates, but it is generally one of the best ways to check progress across the class. DOWNLOAD THE CATALOG TO VIEW ALL GUIDED READING BOOKS AVAILABLE (SORTED LEVELS A-Z) Pre-Reading Question (x1) Teacher asks the prompt aloud, can be while showing the cover or first page. Students share what they already know, or make educated guesses from the cover. Prompt them to use the target vocabulary. Write some of their responses on the board to look back at during the reading. Vocabulary Words (x5) Introduce the five words, best doing it one at a time. Start by saying it, while students repeat and then see if anyone knows what it means before reading further. Read through the meaning and try to briefly connect each word to a picture or gesture so it’s meaningful. Ask students to flip through the book pages and point to where they see each of the vocabulary words. While reading the book pause upon coming across one of the vocab words or read the sentence twice to make sure students understand the word has appeared. Optional: Ask students to raise hands whenever they see/hear one of the new words. Guided Reading Pages (x10) Check the book snapshot (below) for: primary topic - do you need to prep extra reading or intro materials on this? what is taught best - decide on 1-2 bullets to focus on, use the prompt or words provided here for best results. learning goals - what you are checking for students to be able to do after the session, elicit answers using prompts or words provided. key vocabulary (see section above). questions overview - so you know what is coming up and if you need to prep extra materials to assist understanding. Run the lesson You may have already looked at a few of the pages together, but you can show them some of the pictures again first to set meaning. Depending on how much time you have and how familiar your students are with guided reading class, you may want to read the book aloud first with the group first. Students whisper or partner read, while you listen in. If time, do it as a group, one student reading a page each. Use the guided page’s prompts to coach: “Check the picture / does it make sense?” “Point under the words / try the first sound” “Reread the sentence smoothly”. Try to focus more on one student per session (rotating every time), so you can work out if they are ready to move up or need to move down a level. Comprehension Questions (back cover x3) This is your way to check that students didn’t just say the words, but actually understood the text. First, let students answer by pointing to the page/picture and saying a short sentence. After any answer, follow with: “Show me where you found that in the text.” In bigger groups, have partners answer first (10–20 seconds), then call on 2–3 students to share. Differentiation tips: Emerging speakers/struggling readers: oral + pointing On-level: oral in a full sentence Higher: one written sentence or draw + label Book Snapshot Title: Who Cooks for the Community? Genre: Nonfiction (informational) Subject: Social Studies / Reading Primary Topic: Kitchen jobs that feed the community Estimated Guided Reading Level (A–Z): H What This Book Teaches Best How many different workers in a kitchen help make food for others in the community (restaurants, schools, hospitals). The roles and responsibilities of kitchen jobs (head chef, sous chef, line cooks, prep cook, pastry chef, bakers, pizza makers, dishwasher). How teamwork in kitchens helps people stay healthy by providing nutritious meals. Using text to learn job-specific actions and tools (checking supplies, chopping ingredients, measuring, mixing dough, cleaning pots and pans). Learning Goals Students will describe how kitchens help the community using details from the book. Students will identify at least three kitchen jobs named in the text and tell what each job does. Students will explain what the head chef decides and why that role is important. Students will describe how the prep cook helps the other cooks work faster, using text evidence. Students will explain why a clean kitchen is important for preparing food, based on the dishwasher page. Key Vocabulary From the Text sous — a helper chef who is second in charge. ingredients — foods used to make a meal or recipe. responsible — in charge of an important job. specialize — focus on doing one kind of work well. nutritious — good for your body; helps you stay healthy. Discussion Prompts Pre-reading question: Who do you think works in a kitchen, and what might they do? Comprehension questions: Where does the book say people visit kitchens to get the food they need? What does the head chef decide in the kitchen? Why does the book say the dishwasher is an important part of the kitchen team? Printing Tips 1. Best Printing Method (Recommended) “Booklet” Printing (Best if Available) If your printer or PDF viewer supports Booklet Printing , use this. Settings to use: Print mode: Booklet Paper size: Letter or A4 (either works) Orientation: Landscape Print on both sides: Yes Flip on: Short edge Scaling: Fit to printable area Booklet subset: First test: Front sides only Then: Back sides only This will automatically: Pair pages correctly Put the cover on the outside Align everything for folding After printing, fold in half and staple along the spine . 2. If “Booklet” Printing Is NOT Available You can still print this correctly with manual duplex printing . Step-by-step: Open the PDF. Choose Print . Set: Orientation: Landscape Pages per sheet: 1 Print on both sides: Yes Flip on: Short edge Print all pages . Because each PDF page already contains two facing book pages, the result will still fold cleanly into a book. Thousands of Cored Education products are included with your TeachSimple membership. Download links and encyclopedia index available here.

Author Cored Education

Rating

Tags Vocabulary, Reading Comprehension, Reading Passages, Leveled Reading, Nonfiction, Reading, Guided Reading, Social Studies, Chef, Careers

Pentagon, Hexagon, and Octagon Tracing & Coloring For Kindergarten

Pentagon, Hexagon, and Octagon Tracing & Coloring For Kindergarten
Montessori, Math, Shapes, Early Math, Toddler, Kindergarten, Preschool, Centers, Activities, Crafts, Worksheets & Printables, Workbooks, Worksheets

2D Shapes Tracing & Coloring Worksheets Pentagon, Hexagon, and Octagon Activities for Preschool, Montessori, & Kindergarten I have designed this hands-on shapes resource for toddlers, preschoolers, and kindergarten students who are learning to recognize and work with 2D shapes - especially pentagon, hexagon, and octagon. With tracing, coloring, rhymes, and simple cutting activities children can practice fine motor skills while building early shape and language awareness. All the activities inside are easy to use, engaging, and suitable for classrooms, homeschool settings, and independent practice. What’s inside? A fun rhyme about a pentagon named “Peppy” to introduce shape vocabulary Short, child-friendly rhymes for the hexagon and octagon Tracing worksheets for pentagons, hexagons, and octagons to support pencil control and hand-eye coordination Coloring pages to reinforce shape recognition and creativity Additional tracing and coloring pages for star, crescent, heart, diamond (rhombus), plus, and semicircle shape recognition Simple question prompts related to each shape are included to encourage discussion and language development (ESL/EFL friendly) Scissor skills activities : Crown cutting activity Bookmark cutting activity Medal cutting activity Skills Covered Fine motor development through tracing, coloring, and cutting activities Shape recognition and early geometry skills Scissor skills and line-following practice Vocabulary building and oral language development Focus, creativity, and hands-on learning Ways to use this resource Read the rhymes aloud and talk about where children see shapes in everyday life Use tracing and coloring pages during centers, morning work, or quiet time Add cutting pages as simple craft activities Encourage children to draw or talk about objects that match each shape Use question prompts to support ESL/EFL learners and class discussions This resource is useful for: Teachers: As it is perfect for shape-themed lessons, learning centers, early finisher work, or substitute plans. Everything is just print and go with clear instructions. For Homeschoolers: This booklet is an easy to follow resource that allows children to learn shapes at their own pace through hands-on activities. Parents: This set is also a great tool for at-home practice. It will help kids strengthen fine motor skills, shape knowledge, and early vocabulary in a fun and engaging way. Resource details: Answer key included No prep - print and use Black-and-white / grayscale (printer friendly) Step by step teacher instructions included Substitute friendly and time-saving Suitable for toddlers, preschoolers, and kindergartners Montessori-friendly approach ESL/EFL friendly

Author FlashKart

Rating

Tags Pentagon, Hexagon, Octagon, 2D Shapes, Tracing, Coloring, Crown Cutting, Kindergarten, Fine Motor Skills, Heart Shape

Guided Reading Level F - Planets in Our Solar System
Free Download

Guided Reading Level F - Planets in Our Solar System
ELA, Resources for Teachers, Reading Comprehension, Reading, Language Development, Pre-Reading, Vocabulary, Science, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Space, Kindergarten, Grade 1, 2, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets, Teacher Tools, Centers, Activities, Literacy Readers, Quizzes, Quizzes and Tests, Assessments

This Guided Reading Book - Planets in Our Solar System (Level F) includes: Guided Reading Color Label (front cover x1) This is a quick way to match the book’s demands to what students can generally handle.. The overall goal is to use the level/color to pick books for several smaller groups. To qualify for a certain level, a student is expected to read a book from that level with about 90–94% accuracy. If a student is consistently accurate and understands, move up a level. If the student is struggling at that level, drop down and add more support. Each student will improve at completely different rates, but it is generally one of the best ways to check progress across the class. DOWNLOAD THE CATALOG TO VIEW ALL GUIDED READING BOOKS AVAILABLE (SORTED LEVELS A-Z) Pre-Reading Question (x1) Teacher asks the prompt aloud, can be while showing the cover or first page. Students share what they already know, or make educated guesses from the cover. Prompt them to use the target vocabulary. Write some of their responses on the board to look back at during the reading. Vocabulary Words (x5) Introduce the five words, best doing it one at a time. Start by saying it, while students repeat and then see if anyone knows what it means before reading further. Read through the meaning and try to briefly connect each word to a picture or gesture so it’s meaningful. Ask students to flip through the book pages and point to where they see each of the vocabulary words. While reading the book pause upon coming across one of the vocab words or read the sentence twice to make sure students understand the word has appeared. Optional: Ask students to raise hands whenever they see/hear one of the new words. Guided Reading Pages (x10) Check the book snapshot (below) for: primary topic - do you need to prep extra reading or intro materials on this? what is taught best - decide on 1-2 bullets to focus on, use the prompt or words provided here for best results. learning goals - what you are checking for students to be able to do after the session, elicit answers using prompts or words provided. key vocabulary (see section above). questions overview - so you know what is coming up and if you need to prep extra materials to assist understanding. Run the lesson You may have already looked at a few of the pages together, but you can show them some of the pictures again first to set meaning. Depending on how much time you have and how familiar your students are with guided reading class, you may want to read the book aloud first with the group first. Students whisper or partner read, while you listen in. If time, do it as a group, one student reading a page each. Use the guided page’s prompts to coach: “Check the picture / does it make sense?” “Point under the words / try the first sound” “Reread the sentence smoothly”. Try to focus more on one student per session (rotating every time), so you can work out if they are ready to move up or need to move down a level. Comprehension Questions (back cover x3) This is your way to check that students didn’t just say the words, but actually understood the text. First, let students answer by pointing to the page/picture and saying a short sentence. After any answer, follow with: “Show me where you found that in the text.” In bigger groups, have partners answer first (10–20 seconds), then call on 2–3 students to share. Differentiation tips: Emerging speakers/struggling readers: oral + pointing On-level: oral in a full sentence Higher: one written sentence or draw + label Book Snapshot Title: Planets in Our Solar System Genre: Nonfiction (informational) Subject: Science Primary Topic: Basic facts about the Sun, planets, and Moon Estimated Guided Reading Level (A–Z): F What This Book Teaches Best Introduces the Sun as a star in the center that gives light and heat to planets. Teaches planet order with one key fact per planet (Mercury through Neptune). Builds science content vocabulary in context (e.g., craters, surface, giant, unique, reflects ). Supports comparing planets using simple descriptive details (color, temperature, rings, winds, clouds). Learning Goals Students will identify the Sun’s role in the solar system using details from the text. Students will name the planets in order from Mercury to Neptune as presented in the book. Students will describe at least three planets using facts stated in the book. Students will explain what makes one planet “unique” in the text. Students will tell what the Moon does at night, according to the book. Key Vocabulary From the Text craters — deep holes in the ground. surface — the outside layer of something. giant — very, very big. unique — special and not like others. reflects — bounces light back. Discussion Prompts Pre-reading question: What do you already know about the Sun, the Moon, and planets? Comprehension questions: Which planet does the book say is the smallest? What is Saturn famous for? What does the Moon reflect at night? Printing Tips 1. Best Printing Method (Recommended) “Booklet” Printing (Best if Available) If your printer or PDF viewer supports Booklet Printing , use this. Settings to use: Print mode: Booklet Paper size: Letter or A4 (either works) Orientation: Landscape Print on both sides: Yes Flip on: Short edge Scaling: Fit to printable area Booklet subset: First test: Front sides only Then: Back sides only This will automatically: Pair pages correctly Put the cover on the outside Align everything for folding After printing, fold in half and staple along the spine . 2. If “Booklet” Printing Is NOT Available You can still print this correctly with manual duplex printing . Step-by-step: Open the PDF. Choose Print . Set: Orientation: Landscape Pages per sheet: 1 Print on both sides: Yes Flip on: Short edge Print all pages . Because each PDF page already contains two facing book pages, the result will still fold cleanly into a book. Thousands of Cored Education products are included with your TeachSimple membership. Download links and encyclopedia index available here.

Author Cored Education

Rating

Tags Vocabulary, Reading Comprehension, Reading Passages, Leveled Reading, Nonfiction, Reading, Guided Reading, Earth Science, Space, Planets

1st grade Coronavirus / Covid-19 Facts

1st grade Coronavirus / Covid-19 Facts
P.E. & Health, Health, Special Resources, Life Skills, Social Emotional Learning (SEL), Social Skills, Kindergarten, Grade 1, Teacher Tools, Lesson Plans, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets

First Grade Coronavirus Facts simplifies a complex topic for young learners. This informative lesson teaches essential information about COVID-19, including what it is, how it spreads, and how to stay safe. Presented in straightforward language, it covers the virus's origins and transmission. Students gain key understandings like hand washing, mask wearing, and social distancing. Educators can facilitate rich discussions to build health awareness. The material suits whole-group instruction or independent learning centers. This timely resource equips first grade classrooms with age-appropriate details about the coronavirus pandemic. Included are a total of 13 pages with lots of activities for young learners. There are seven units that cover all the health requirements for first grade. Here are the links to other health units: Health 1st Grade Unit 1: Personal Health by Teach Simple Health 1st Grade Unit 2: Growth and Development by Teach Simple Health 1st Grade Unit 3: Nutrition and Physical Activity by Teach Simple Health 1st Grade Unit 4: Substance Use and Abuse by Teach Simple Health 1st Grade Unit 5: Injury / Violence Prevention and Safety by Teach Simple Health 1st Grade Unit 6: Prevention / Control of Disease by Teach Simple Health 1st Grade Unit 7: Environmental / Consumer Health by Teach Simple You can also teach your students about keeping yourself safe by studying about the Coronavirus, where and when it started and facts that plagued our world with this virus. 1st grade Coronavirus / Covid-19 Facts by Teach Simple This unit meets Common Core Standards.

Author K-5 Treasures

Tags Coronavirus, Covid-19 Facts, Pandemic, Spread Of Virus, 1st Grade Health, First Grade Health, Health Resources , Health Worksheets, Worksheets On Health, Worksheets On Covid

Ocean Animal Research Writing Project on SEA TURTLES for K-2nd Grade

Ocean Animal Research Writing Project on SEA TURTLES for K-2nd Grade
Life Studies, ELA, Writing, Creative Writing, Reading, Science, Life Sciences, Animals, Research, Kindergarten, Grade 1, 2, Lesson Plans, Teacher Tools, Presentations, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets, Writing Prompts

Sea Turtle Animal Research Writing Project for K-2. Engage your K-2 students in learning about sea turtles with this 19-page animal research writing project. Students will read age-appropriate information about sea turtles, examine real-life photos, color pictures, draw a sea turtle habitat, organize facts using writing organizers, and write an informational report on sea turtles. This unit is differentiated for various abilities and for ages K-2nd grade. This project promotes reading, creativity, and early research and writing skills. Use it for whole-class instruction, small groups, or individual assignments. With fun borders and opportunities for students to be creative while building knowledge, this packet offers multi-day engagement to learn about the amazing sea turtle! Here are even more informational resources on report writing for OCEAN ANIMALS. Click on the links below: Animal Research Writing Project on WHALES for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on the OCTOPUS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on SEA TURTLES for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on ORCAS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on the SHELLFISH for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on DOLPHINS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on SEALS for K-2nd Grade Want to teach your students all about Zoo Animals? Check out all these interesting facts about these favorite zoo animals. With the same great photos, facts, habitat drawings, and more. It is a great way to help students to get interested in writing. For Zoo Animal reports, click on the following links below: Animal Research Writing Project on TIGERS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on MONKEYS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on PANDAS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on HIPPOS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on ELEPHANTS for K-2nd Grade Animal Research Writing Project on GIRAFFES for K-2nd Grade

Author K-5 Treasures

Tags Animal Research, Informational Writing, Writing Report, Report On Animals, 1st Grade Writing, 2nd Grade Writing, Ocean Animals, Sea Turtles, Report Of Sea Turtles, Ocean Animal Report

Letter of the Week Letter D Printables Activity Pack Phonics

Letter of the Week Letter D Printables Activity Pack Phonics
Phonics, Language Development, ELA, Pre-Reading, Kindergarten, Preschool, Homeschool Curriculum, Homeschool Templates, Grade 1, Centers, Activities, Crafts, Coloring Pages, Worksheets, Worksheets & Printables, Crosswords Puzzles, Dot To Dots, Mazes, Word Searches

Dive into the Letter D with this playful and purposeful activity pack, perfect for preschool and kindergarten classrooms! Whether you're teaching uppercase, lowercase, or the letter D sound, this Letter of the Week Letter D Pack offers everything you need—no prep required. With 87 engaging printable worksheets and 31 interactive Boom Cards , your students will explore the letter D through hands-on phonics, fine motor tasks, and multisensory fun. ✏️ What’s Included: 📄 Printable Worksheets Letter D Poster + 6 Visual Vocabulary Cards Booklet Cover + ‘About Me’ Page Tracing & Writing Uppercase and Lowercase D Letter D Sorting, Spinning (includes review of R & H), and Finding Activities Drawing and Coloring Letter D Pictures Sound Recognition for: /a/, /s/, /t/, /n/ Mazes, Dot-to-Dot, Puzzles, Dab the Dots Color by Code, Geoboard Activity, and Visual Cutouts Fairy Tale Connection: The Ugly Duckling Coloring Sheet Word Family Practice: -ad, -id, -ed Summary Sheet for Review 🎨 Crafts & Literacy Extras “I’m a Letter D Champ” Crown & Bracelet Mini Flipbook with Letter D Words & Visuals One-Page Mini Booklet & Sight Word Flipbook Dog-Themed Finger Puppets (6 per page) Stick Puppet Templates (4 per page) Letter D Word Wheel (6 Vocabulary Sections) 💻 Boom Cards – 31 Digital Activities Formation & Recognition of Uppercase and Lowercase D Letter D Name and Sound Activities Puzzle Matching: Uppercase/Lowercase Drag-and-Drop Sorting (Uppercase vs Lowercase D) Visual Reveal Game (Letter D Pictures) Sentence Use: Capital D vs Lowercase d 🎯 Perfect For: Letter of the Week Instruction Literacy Centers & Morning Work Small Groups & Fine Motor Stations Homework Packets or Digital Practice Phonics and Sound Awareness Support ⭐ Bonus: Includes both US and British English spelling versions to suit every classroom need. Set your students up for success with this Letter D Phonics & Alphabet Pack —a fun, flexible, and foundational resource for early learners.

Author Teach2Tell

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Tags Letter D Activities, Letter Of The Week Letter D, Alphabet Worksheets Letter D, Preschool Letter D Printables, Kindergarten Letter D Activities, Uppercase And Lowercase Letter D, Phonics Practice Letter D, Dog Letter D Craft, The Ugly Duckling Letter Activity, Interactive Letter D Phonics Activities

Guided Reading Level H - Clean Hands, Healthy Bodies

Guided Reading Level H - Clean Hands, Healthy Bodies
ELA, Resources for Teachers, Reading Comprehension, Reading, Health, P.E. & Health, Social Emotional Learning (SEL), Special Resources, Life Skills, Science, Kindergarten, Grade 1, 2, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets, Teacher Tools, Centers, Activities, Literacy Readers, Quizzes, Quizzes and Tests, Assessments

This Guided Reading Book - Clean Hands, Healthy Bodies (Level H) includes: Guided Reading Color Label (front cover x1) This is a quick way to match the book’s demands to what students can generally handle.. The overall goal is to use the level/color to pick books for several smaller groups. To qualify for a certain level, a student is expected to read a book from that level with about 90–94% accuracy. If a student is consistently accurate and understands, move up a level. If the student is struggling at that level, drop down and add more support. Each student will improve at completely different rates, but it is generally one of the best ways to check progress across the class. DOWNLOAD THE CATALOG TO VIEW ALL GUIDED READING BOOKS AVAILABLE (SORTED LEVELS A-Z) Pre-Reading Question (x1) Teacher asks the prompt aloud, can be while showing the cover or first page. Students share what they already know, or make educated guesses from the cover. Prompt them to use the target vocabulary. Write some of their responses on the board to look back at during the reading. Vocabulary Words (x5) Introduce the five words, best doing it one at a time. Start by saying it, while students repeat and then see if anyone knows what it means before reading further. Read through the meaning and try to briefly connect each word to a picture or gesture so it’s meaningful. Ask students to flip through the book pages and point to where they see each of the vocabulary words. While reading the book pause upon coming across one of the vocab words or read the sentence twice to make sure students understand the word has appeared. Optional: Ask students to raise hands whenever they see/hear one of the new words. Guided Reading Pages (x10) Check the book snapshot (below) for: primary topic - do you need to prep extra reading or intro materials on this? what is taught best - decide on 1-2 bullets to focus on, use the prompt or words provided here for best results. learning goals - what you are checking for students to be able to do after the session, elicit answers using prompts or words provided. key vocabulary (see section above). questions overview - so you know what is coming up and if you need to prep extra materials to assist understanding. Run the lesson You may have already looked at a few of the pages together, but you can show them some of the pictures again first to set meaning. Depending on how much time you have and how familiar your students are with guided reading class, you may want to read the book aloud first with the group first. Students whisper or partner read, while you listen in. If time, do it as a group, one student reading a page each. Use the guided page’s prompts to coach: “Check the picture / does it make sense?” “Point under the words / try the first sound” “Reread the sentence smoothly”. Try to focus more on one student per session (rotating every time), so you can work out if they are ready to move up or need to move down a level. Comprehension Questions (back cover x3) This is your way to check that students didn’t just say the words, but actually understood the text. First, let students answer by pointing to the page/picture and saying a short sentence. After any answer, follow with: “Show me where you found that in the text.” In bigger groups, have partners answer first (10–20 seconds), then call on 2–3 students to share. Differentiation tips: Emerging speakers/struggling readers: oral + pointing On-level: oral in a full sentence Higher: one written sentence or draw + label Book Snapshot Title: Clean Hands, Healthy Bodies Genre: Nonfiction (informational) Subject: Health & Safety / Science Primary Topic: When and how to wash hands to stop germs Estimated Guided Reading Level (A–Z): H What This Book Teaches Best Why washing hands matters: it “keeps germs away” and helps prevent germs from spreading to other people. When to wash hands (before eating, after outdoor play, after using the toilet, after playing with a pet). How to wash hands step-by-step (wet with clean running water, use soap, scrub all areas, rinse, dry). A key procedure detail: scrubbing should last “twenty seconds” to remove germs. The idea of healthy habits: making handwashing a regular habit “protects everyone.” Learning Goals Students will explain one reason the book gives for washing hands, using a detail from the text. Students will identify at least two times the book says hands should be washed. Students will describe the steps for washing hands in order, based on the text. Students will state how long scrubbing should last, according to the book. Students will describe how handwashing helps other people, using the book’s words about spreading germs/protecting everyone. Key Vocabulary From the Text germs — tiny living things that can make you sick. contact — touching something. invisible — cannot be seen. scrub — rub hard to get something clean. protects — keeps safe from harm. Discussion Prompts Pre-reading question: When do you think it is most important to wash your hands? Comprehension questions: Name one time the book says you should wash your hands. How long should scrubbing last when you wash your hands? Why does washing your hands help other people? Printing Tips 1. Best Printing Method (Recommended) “Booklet” Printing (Best if Available) If your printer or PDF viewer supports Booklet Printing , use this. Settings to use: Print mode: Booklet Paper size: Letter or A4 (either works) Orientation: Landscape Print on both sides: Yes Flip on: Short edge Scaling: Fit to printable area Booklet subset: First test: Front sides only Then: Back sides only This will automatically: Pair pages correctly Put the cover on the outside Align everything for folding After printing, fold in half and staple along the spine . 2. If “Booklet” Printing Is NOT Available You can still print this correctly with manual duplex printing . Step-by-step: Open the PDF. Choose Print . Set: Orientation: Landscape Pages per sheet: 1 Print on both sides: Yes Flip on: Short edge Print all pages . Because each PDF page already contains two facing book pages, the result will still fold cleanly into a book. Thousands of Cored Education products are included with your TeachSimple membership. Download links and encyclopedia index available here.

Author Cored Education

Rating

Tags Vocabulary, Reading Comprehension, Reading Passages, Leveled Reading, Nonfiction, Reading, Guided Reading, Health, SEL, Life Skills

Ways to Make 6 ,7, 8,9|Visual Addition Numbers Ways to Make Worksheet

Ways to Make 6 ,7, 8,9|Visual Addition Numbers Ways to Make Worksheet
Math, Addition and Subtraction, Algebra, Calculus, Early Math, Kindergarten, Preschool, Activities, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets, Teacher Tools, Centers, Games

Using shapes to break the number is a creative and attractive way to help young students understand the concepts of fundamental mathematics, which makes 2,3,4,5, three different ways. Download preview to see each activity. Just print, cut, and laminate the activity you want to use Colorful shapes attract students' attention and make the concepts of abstract mathematics more solid and easier. Children allow to use physical size cut-outs to pull size or break individual numbers that make the text with touch and hands. Encourage students to form teams in pairs or small groups, to increase dialogue between number, teamwork and colleagues. This will be great activities for a teacher -led, small group text before going to an independent student -led center. Since activities do not require a recording sheet, they will also be great for morning tub or fast finisher activity.ways to Making 2,3,4,5 worksheets PDF Forma Printable and digital-friendly! Page 19

Author LAMO

Tags Numbers, Math, Games, Activities, Basic Operations, Worksheets, Centers, Lessons, Arithmetic, Printables

i-e Phonic Worksheets for Special Needs
Free Download

i-e Phonic Worksheets for Special Needs
Special Resources, ELA, Language Development, Phonics, Reading, Spelling, Kindergarten, Preschool, Grade 1, 2, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets, Activities, Games

This is a pack of 12 phonic worksheets for the Long Vowel I-E (as in tie and ride) specially designed for those with special needs, including those with dyslexia or who may be suspected of being dyslexic but will work equally well with young learners in Kindergarten/EYFS/Y1. A pack of 12 I-E worksheets with a variety of exercises to help build phonemic awareness and reading fluency. These sheets are LETRS and UK GOV requirements aligned. These worksheets also align with the most popular phonic programmes, including RWI and Letters and Sounds. What is included? 12 worksheets for the sound I-E taking pupils from hearing the sounds in words to reading and spelling them at word and sentence level. all following my special method devised as I privately tutor children of all ages with profound special needs. Your phonics lessons covered! Tracking, fluency triangles, spelling, reading, games, comprehension exercises....and more! Who are these worksheets for? I have written them for pupils who struggle with processing information - especially sounds. This includes children who are DYSLEXIC or have ANY other kind of processing disorder. Such children may have failed with other methods of teaching phonics. Such pupils need activities that: ·are highly structured - one tiny step at a time building on the one before using only a limited number of words to start with and only using words that the child has already learnt to sound out, with no nasty surprises. ·Have only a little on each pageas these pupils tire easily. What makes these worksheets special? I have a powerful three-step process which I use with my special needs pupils, which is worked out over the course of the 12 worksheets: 1. See it!where we focus on becoming aware of the new sound in words. This involves first hearing the new sound in words and then seeing it in words (tracking). 2. Sound-it-out!Having learnt to see the new sound in words, we learn to sound out these words to read and write them. We begin by usingsound-it-out boxesfor reading and spelling which help the child to segment the word prior to blending the sounds together. Once the child can read and write individual words, we work on fluency by building familiarity with the common words in the new sound family. Once the child can sound the words out to read and spell confidently, we move on to recognising them/using them in longer reading and dictation passages, as soon as the child is able. I provide 2 reading passages with comprehension exercises and one dictation passage, with a page in the workbook dedicated to it, with room for a picture, which again cements understanding. 3. Write it! Incorporated into the above two steps, we constantly write the new sound. This adds a multi-sensory dimension to our work - we see with our eyes, we sound it with our mouth parts and voice, and then we move by writing. All three steps work together to help the child feel in control of his/her learning and to become a successful, confident learner. We finish each sound with a dictation which culminates our work before we move on to the next sound. I try to give the dictation a week after we finish the work on the EA sound to act as revision. The dictation: Read this passage to your pupil, who should write it. Have the child read his/her work and check for errors. Make sure the writing is completely accurate before saying the child has finished, including full stops and capital letters correctly used. Flashcards are included of some common I-E words. What is included? 1 PDF with flashcards and 12 I-E worksheets

Author Lilibette's Resources

Tags Split Digraph A-e, Silent E, Magic E, Phonic Worksheets, Special Needs, Phonic Games, Print N Play Phonic Game, I-e Worksheets, Split Digraph I-e, Phonics I-e

Learn The Phonic Sound Soft c (as in mice)

Learn The Phonic Sound Soft c (as in mice)
ELA, Language Development, Phonics, Preschool, Kindergarten, Grade 1, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets

Introducing Learn The Phonic Sound Soft c (as in mice) This cutting-edge learning tool is designed to facilitate effective reading, targeting mostly children aged 4 and above. It is a comprehensive resource meant for younger learners, older reluctant readers aged 7-9+, students encountering learning difficulties, and non-native English speaking learners. Purposeful Structure and Captivating Content The structure of this educational pack successfully integrates 44 phonic sounds into textual content capturing adventurous exploits of a character named Sam. By following these engaging stories featuring Sam, students interactively find hidden phonics while also cracking intricate middle sounds within compelling narratives like 'The Bouncing Castle' and 'The Famous Cousin From The Country.'. Impressive Skills Gain Through Practical Engagement Upon finishing their learning journey with Sam, our young readers will have gained sufficient confidence and fluency to graduate onto more sophisticated standalone books like Roald Dahl classics such as 'George's Marvellous Medicine' or the ever-popular, 'Fantastic Mr Fox'.. Diverse Activity Inclusion To Boost Memory Retention The inclusion of matching words or phrases to pictures ensures effective planting of sound words into the learner's memory. The simple text combined with appealing color sketches makes it enticing for growing readers. A step-by-step organized progression based on every unique sound presented: A single pack consolidates one sound which can be used independently or ordered sequentially from starting sounds yielding three or four-letter words along an established progression as mapped out in the Guide. Easy-to-use PDF Format Regardless of whether it's individual instruction sessions with parents or teachers or small group teaching, the PDF format is perfect for all. In conclusion, The Learn The Phonic Sound Soft c (as in mice) tool is designed for educators who aim to instill a solid foundation of language skills in their students during their early learning stages. This resource revolutionizes lesson planning by providing an engaging and informative platform covering kindergarten to grade 1 Language Arts curriculum with a special focus on Phonics.

Author Guinea Pig Education

Tags Phonics, Reading Skills, Learning Difficulties, Language Skills, Early Learning

Guided Reading Level E - Safe in a Storm

Guided Reading Level E - Safe in a Storm
ELA, Resources for Teachers, Reading Comprehension, Reading, Language Development, Pre-Reading, Vocabulary, Science, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Physics, Kindergarten, Grade 1, 2, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets, Teacher Tools, Centers, Activities, Literacy Readers, Quizzes, Quizzes and Tests, Assessments

This Guided Reading Book - Safe in a Storm (Level E) includes: Guided Reading Color Label (front cover x1) This is a quick way to match the book’s demands to what students can generally handle.. The overall goal is to use the level/color to pick books for several smaller groups. To qualify for a certain level, a student is expected to read a book from that level with about 90–94% accuracy. If a student is consistently accurate and understands, move up a level. If the student is struggling at that level, drop down and add more support. Each student will improve at completely different rates, but it is generally one of the best ways to check progress across the class. DOWNLOAD THE CATALOG TO VIEW ALL GUIDED READING BOOKS AVAILABLE (SORTED LEVELS A-Z) Pre-Reading Question (x1) Teacher asks the prompt aloud, can be while showing the cover or first page. Students share what they already know, or make educated guesses from the cover. Prompt them to use the target vocabulary. Write some of their responses on the board to look back at during the reading. Vocabulary Words (x5) Introduce the five words, best doing it one at a time. Start by saying it, while students repeat and then see if anyone knows what it means before reading further. Read through the meaning and try to briefly connect each word to a picture or gesture so it’s meaningful. Ask students to flip through the book pages and point to where they see each of the vocabulary words. While reading the book pause upon coming across one of the vocab words or read the sentence twice to make sure students understand the word has appeared. Optional: Ask students to raise hands whenever they see/hear one of the new words. Guided Reading Pages (x10) Check the book snapshot (below) for: primary topic - do you need to prep extra reading or intro materials on this? what is taught best - decide on 1-2 bullets to focus on, use the prompt or words provided here for best results. learning goals - what you are checking for students to be able to do after the session, elicit answers using prompts or words provided. key vocabulary (see section above). questions overview - so you know what is coming up and if you need to prep extra materials to assist understanding. Run the lesson You may have already looked at a few of the pages together, but you can show them some of the pictures again first to set meaning. Depending on how much time you have and how familiar your students are with guided reading class, you may want to read the book aloud first with the group first. Students whisper or partner read, while you listen in. If time, do it as a group, one student reading a page each. Use the guided page’s prompts to coach: “Check the picture / does it make sense?” “Point under the words / try the first sound” “Reread the sentence smoothly”. Try to focus more on one student per session (rotating every time), so you can work out if they are ready to move up or need to move down a level. Comprehension Questions (back cover x3) This is your way to check that students didn’t just say the words, but actually understood the text. First, let students answer by pointing to the page/picture and saying a short sentence. After any answer, follow with: “Show me where you found that in the text.” In bigger groups, have partners answer first (10–20 seconds), then call on 2–3 students to share. Differentiation tips: Emerging speakers/struggling readers: oral + pointing On-level: oral in a full sentence Higher: one written sentence or draw + label Book Snapshot Title: Safe in a Storm Genre: Nonfiction (informational safety) Subject: Science / Health & Safety Primary Topic: Staying safe before, during, after storms Estimated Guided Reading Level (A–Z): E What This Book Teaches Best Recognizing signs that a storm is near (dark clouds, wind, lightning, thunder). Knowing the safest place to be when thunder roars (inside a sturdy building). Following indoor safety steps during storms (stay away from windows; sit in the middle of a room). Making safe choices when power goes out and after storms (use a flashlight; avoid floodwater; return outside when it is safe). Understanding storm-related dangers involving electricity and water (avoid plugged-in devices; stay away from water). Learning Goals Students will identify at least two signs that a storm is near using details from the text. Students will explain where the book says to be when thunder roars. Students will describe two ways to stay safe inside during a storm, based on the text. Students will explain why the book says to stay away from water during a storm. Students will retell safety steps from the book in order (before/during/after the storm). Key Vocabulary From the Text lightning — a bright flash in the sky. sturdy — strong and not easy to break. flashlight — a small light you can hold. electricity — power that runs lights and devices. floodwater — water covering land after heavy rain. Discussion Prompts Pre-reading question: What do you do at home to stay safe when a storm is coming? Comprehension questions: What are two signs the book says can tell you a storm is near? Where does the book say is the best place to be when thunder roars? Why does the book say to stay away from water during a storm? Printing Tips 1. Best Printing Method (Recommended) “Booklet” Printing (Best if Available) If your printer or PDF viewer supports Booklet Printing , use this. Settings to use: Print mode: Booklet Paper size: Letter or A4 (either works) Orientation: Landscape Print on both sides: Yes Flip on: Short edge Scaling: Fit to printable area Booklet subset: First test: Front sides only Then: Back sides only This will automatically: Pair pages correctly Put the cover on the outside Align everything for folding After printing, fold in half and staple along the spine . 2. If “Booklet” Printing Is NOT Available You can still print this correctly with manual duplex printing . Step-by-step: Open the PDF. Choose Print . Set: Orientation: Landscape Pages per sheet: 1 Print on both sides: Yes Flip on: Short edge Print all pages . Because each PDF page already contains two facing book pages, the result will still fold cleanly into a book. Thousands of Cored Education products are included with your TeachSimple membership. Download links and encyclopedia index available here.

Author Cored Education

Rating

Tags Vocabulary, Reading Comprehension, Reading Passages, Leveled Reading, Nonfiction, Reading, Guided Reading, Earth Science, Storms, Physics

Guided Reading Level B: Meet Mars

Guided Reading Level B: Meet Mars
ELA, Resources for Teachers, Reading Comprehension, Reading, Science, Language Development, Pre-Reading, Vocabulary, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Space, Kindergarten, Preschool, Grade 1, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets, Teacher Tools, Centers, Activities, Literacy Readers, Quizzes, Quizzes and Tests, Assessments

This Guided Reading Book - Meet Mars (Level B) includes: Guided Reading Color Label (front cover x1) This is a quick way to match the book’s demands to what students can generally handle.. The overall goal is to use the level/color to pick books for several smaller groups. To qualify for a certain level, a student is expected to read a book from that level with about 90–94% accuracy. If a student is consistently accurate and understands, move up a level. If the student is struggling at that level, drop down and add more support. Each student will improve at completely different rates, but it is generally one of the best ways to check progress across the class. DOWNLOAD THE CATALOG TO VIEW ALL GUIDED READING BOOKS AVAILABLE (SORTED LEVELS A-Z) Pre-Reading Question (x1) Teacher asks the prompt aloud, can be while showing the cover or first page. Students share what they already know, or make educated guesses from the cover. Prompt them to use the target vocabulary. Write some of their responses on the board to look back at during the reading. Vocabulary Words (x5) Introduce the five words, best doing it one at a time. Start by saying it, while students repeat and then see if anyone knows what it means before reading further. Read through the meaning and try to briefly connect each word to a picture or gesture so it’s meaningful. Ask students to flip through the book pages and point to where they see each of the vocabulary words. While reading the book pause upon coming across one of the vocab words or read the sentence twice to make sure students understand the word has appeared. Optional: Ask students to raise hands whenever they see/hear one of the new words. Guided Reading Pages (x10) Check the book snapshot (below) for: primary topic - do you need to prep extra reading or intro materials on this? what is taught best - decide on 1-2 bullets to focus on, use the prompt or words provided here for best results. learning goals - what you are checking for students to be able to do after the session, elicit answers using prompts or words provided. key vocabulary (see section above). questions overview - so you know what is coming up and if you need to prep extra materials to assist understanding. Run the lesson You may have already looked at a few of the pages together, but you can show them some of the pictures again first to set meaning. Depending on how much time you have and how familiar your students are with guided reading class, you may want to read the book aloud first with the group first. Students whisper or partner read, while you listen in. If time, do it as a group, one student reading a page each. Use the guided page’s prompts to coach: “Check the picture / does it make sense?” “Point under the words / try the first sound” “Reread the sentence smoothly”. Try to focus more on one student per session (rotating every time), so you can work out if they are ready to move up or need to move down a level. Comprehension Questions (back cover x3) This is your way to check that students didn’t just say the words, but actually understood the text. First, let students answer by pointing to the page/picture and saying a short sentence. After any answer, follow with: “Show me where you found that in the text.” In bigger groups, have partners answer first (10–20 seconds), then call on 2–3 students to share. Differentiation tips: Emerging speakers/struggling readers: oral + pointing On-level: oral in a full sentence Higher: one written sentence or draw + label Book Snapshot Title: Meet Mars Genre: Nonfiction (simple informational) Subject: Science Primary Topic: Mars facts: color and surface features Estimated Guided Reading Level (A–Z): B What This Book Teaches Best Identifying basic facts about Mars (e.g., “Mars is red.” and “Mars is in space.”). Naming features Mars “has” (dust, rocks, a mountain, a crater, wind, ice, moons, the sun). Using repeated sentence patterns (“Mars is…” / “Mars has…”) to support early fluency. Connecting key science words to meaning through simple, concrete statements. Learning Goals Students will state one fact about Mars using evidence from the text. Students will name at least three things Mars has, as described in the book. Students will answer simple who/what/where questions using the book’s sentences. Students will use the repeated sentence frame “Mars has ___” to retell information from the text. Students will explain the meaning of selected Mars words using the context of the sentences. Key Vocabulary From the Text dust — tiny bits of dirt. mountain — a very tall hill. crater — a big round hole. moons — round objects near Mars. space — far above Earth. Discussion Prompts Pre-reading question: What do you think you will learn about Mars in this book? Comprehension questions: What color is Mars? Name one thing Mars has. Where is Mars? Printing Tips 1. Best Printing Method (Recommended) “Booklet” Printing (Best if Available) If your printer or PDF viewer supports Booklet Printing , use this. Settings to use: Print mode: Booklet Paper size: Letter or A4 (either works) Orientation: Landscape Print on both sides: Yes Flip on: Short edge Scaling: Fit to printable area Booklet subset: First test: Front sides only Then: Back sides only This will automatically: Pair pages correctly Put the cover on the outside Align everything for folding After printing, fold in half and staple along the spine . 2. If “Booklet” Printing Is NOT Available You can still print this correctly with manual duplex printing . Step-by-step: Open the PDF. Choose Print . Set: Orientation: Landscape Pages per sheet: 1 Print on both sides: Yes Flip on: Short edge Print all pages . Because each PDF page already contains two facing book pages, the result will still fold cleanly into a book. Thousands of Cored Education products are included with your TeachSimple membership. Download links and encyclopedia index available here.

Author Cored Education

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Tags Vocabulary, Reading Comprehension, Reading Passages, Leveled Reading, Nonfiction, Reading, Guided Reading, Earth Science, Space, Mars

Phonic Reading Scheme: Fully Incremental For All Abilities GROWING SET
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Phonic Reading Scheme: Fully Incremental For All Abilities GROWING SET
Special Resources, ELA, Special Education Needs (SEN), Language Development, Phonics, Reading, Homeschool Curriculum, Kindergarten, Literacy Readers, Teacher Tools, Games, Activities, Flashcards, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets

A pack of 32 Phonic reading books with matching PowerPoints and workbooks to support learning. This is an incremental phonics reading scheme with a difference. Introducing just 10 words in each phonics family, the words are repeated from book to book, giving even those with very poor word recall the chance to learn to read fluently without having to decode every word. Ideal for dyslexics, or those suspected of being dyslexic and all children with a special need. You can view the first CK pack with a set of 30+ supporting activities and games FREE here. The books cover these sounds and must be taught in this order: CK; OO; SH; CH; ND/NT; NK; TH; NG; AR; OR; A-E; I-E, O-R, U-E, AI, EA, OA, IGH Rationale: It has long been proven that teaching children to decode is a powerful tool for teaching reading, as opposed to the Look and Say method. However, this has led to a proliferation of reading books that throw as many words with a shared phonics sound into a book as possible, not realising that some children with very poor word recall find it hard to recognise words when they see them again without much repetition. To combat this problem, while we recognise that, technically, once a child has been taught a new sound s/he can sound out many words with that new sound, when it comes to reading fluently a child needs a core set of words in each family that they can recognise, which can act as a launch pad as they gain confidence. These books have been designed accordingly. For each sound family, just 10 words are studied with the help of the workbooks and are then repeated throughout the books, each book building on the vocabulary that has already been learned, repeating it and including it in new phrases as new sounds are learned. As the programme progresses, new sounds from the learned families are incorporated to widen vocabulary, while taking care to maintain fluency. The books are designed to limit guessing (though most children will try and guess, which must be avoided at all costs). Pluses of this phonics reading programme Easy to print Cheap to buy compared with expensive reading schemes They are just as effective as the best reading programmes out there, and more importantly, they have been tried and tested on real children with severe difficulties and proven to work if the child is taught as outlined. Aligned with the aims and objectives of LETRS and the Science of Reading. They work! My pupils tell me if they don't work, so I re-edit them and try them before I put them out for the general public. Introduces most high-frequency words in the phonics family to which they belong, and gradually introduces genuine, non-decodable sight words into the text without causing overload or throwing the child off course. What is included? Each book is 12/16/20 pages long, with minimal colour pictures to make printing cheaper and to help tell the story when words are minimal Each book comes with a matching PowerPoint, making it suitable for online teaching, for private tutors, parents, classroom assistants, etc... All books come with supporting activities and games - 100s of worksheets! Scope and Sequence included I am writing a new book regularly, so this pack will quickly grow!

Author Lilibette's Resources

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Tags Phonics Intervention, Homeschool Reading, Phonic Reading Scheme, Decodable Readers, Home School, Decodable Reading Books, Guided Reading, Phonics Readers, Literacy Activities

Writing And Comprehension Practice: Zoggy Is Lost (4-8 years)

Writing And Comprehension Practice: Zoggy Is Lost (4-8 years)
ELA, Language Development, Phonics, Kindergarten, Preschool, Grade 1, 2, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets

Title: Writing And Comprehension Practice: Zoggy Is Lost (4-8 years) This educational resource is perfect for educators engaging with preschoolers, kindergartners, and students in Grades 1 and 2. It primarily focuses on Language Arts subjects with a specific emphasis on phonics. About the Product: The product involves phonic writing practice and comprehension worksheets based on the popular Mission Spelling Zero book 'Zoggy Is Lost'. This workbook belongs to the green level scheme of Mission Spelling Zero. The supplemental material within ideally reinforces what's learned in 'Zoggy Is Lost', hence it's advisable to purchase only if students read or have access to this book. Content Includes: Sounds reinforcement of letters Focused activities on tracing and writing letters/words Learnable spellings Simple comprehension questions derived from storytelling. Main Attraction: The unique protagonist of these exercises is an innovative alien named Zoggy. From his distant planet, he solves problems using wizard-like computer skills. Young learners get introduced first to initial sounds through attractive stories, extending later towards double consonant blends and vowel digraphs learning. This resource comprises 24 engaging pages, suitable for whole group activity during classroom lessons or smaller group concepts understanding sessions. Even homeschooling parents might find this beneficial during personal study time or as homework assignments allowing children self-paced understanding outside classroom hours. Besides supporting first reading journey milestones,this product also guides learners towards early spelling achievements while laying a strong foundation for future education pursuits. Note-All worksheets are provided in PDF format which can be printed flexibly as per teaching requirements, providing learners with enough opportunities to polish their handwriting skills, write initial sentences, and play games for enhanced comprehension.

Author Guinea Pig Education

Tags Writing Practice, Comprehension Worksheets, Phonics, Spelling Mastery, Early Reading

TH Phonic Worksheets for Early Years/Intervention/Special Needs

TH Phonic Worksheets for Early Years/Intervention/Special Needs
Special Resources, ELA, Language Development, Phonics, Reading, Spelling, Kindergarten, Preschool, Grade 1, 2, Activities, Games, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets

This is a pack of 26 phonic worksheets for the sound TH (as in this and cloth) specially designed for those with special needs, including those with dyslexia or who may be suspected of being dyslexic but will work equally well with young learners in Kindergarten/EYFS/Y1. A pack of 26 TH worksheets with a variety of exercises to help build phonemic awareness and reading fluency. These sheets are LETRS and UK GOV requirements aligned. These worksheets also align with the most popular phonic programmes, including RWI and Letters and Sounds. What is included? 26 worksheets for the sound TH taking pupils from hearing the sounds in words to reading and spelling them at word and sentence level. all following my special method devised as I privately tutor children of all ages with profound special needs. Your phonics lessons are covered! Tracking, fluency triangles, spelling, reading, games, comprehension exercises....and more! 1 colour-by-code picture for added fun! Who are these worksheets for? I have written them for pupils who struggle with processing information - especially sounds. This includes children who are DYSLEXIC or have ANY other kind of processing disorder. Such children may have failed with other methods of teaching phonics. Such pupils need activities that: ·are highly structured - one tiny step at a time building on the one before using only a limited number of words to start with and only using words that the child has already learnt to sound out, with no nasty surprises. ·Have only a little on each pageas these pupils tire easily. What makes these worksheets special? I have a powerful three-step process which I use with my special needs pupils, which is worked out over the course of the 23 worksheets: 1. See it!where we focus on becoming aware of the new sound in words. This involves first hearing the new sound in words and then seeing it in words (tracking). 2. Sound-it-out!Having learnt to see the new sound in words, we learn to sound out these words to read and write them. We begin by usingsound-it-out boxesfor reading and spelling which help the child to segment the word prior to blending the sounds together. Once the child can read and write individual words, we work on fluency by building familiarity with the common words in the new sound family. Once the child can sound the words out to read and spell confidently, we move on to recognising them/using them in longer reading and dictation passages, as soon as the child is able. I provide 2 reading passages with comprehension exercises and one dictation passage, with a page in the workbook dedicated to it, with room for a picture, which again cements understanding. 3. Write it! Incorporated into the above two steps, we constantly write the new sound. This adds a multi-sensory dimension to our work - we see with our eyes, we sound it with our mouth parts and voice, and then we move by writing. All three steps work together to help the child feel in control of his/her learning and to become a successful, confident learner. Simply choose the pages each child needs and put them together to make a work book! We finish each sound with a dictation which culminates our work before we move on to the next sound. I try to give the dictation a week after we finish the work on the EA sound to act as revision. The dictation: Read this passage to your pupil, who should write it. Have the child read his/her work and check for errors. Make sure the writing is completely accurate before saying the child has finished, including full stops and capital letters correctly used. Flashcards are included of some common TH words. What is included? 1 PDF with flashcards and 26 worksheets

Author Lilibette's Resources

Tags Phonic Worksheets, Special Needs, Dyslexia, Learn To Read TH Words, Spelling TH Words, Consonant Blends, TH Words, Learning TH

‘Fill In The Missing Letters’ WORKSHEETS (4-7 years)

‘Fill In The Missing Letters’ WORKSHEETS (4-7 years)
ELA, Language Development, Phonics, Kindergarten, Preschool, Grade 1, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets

Fill In The Missing Letters Worksheets (4-7 years) These worksheets provide a valuable educational tool for teachers and parents homeschooling early learners, preschool children, kindergarten students and those in grade 1. With seven pages of engaging content, these worksheets focus on aiding the development of essential abilities - reading, writing and spelling. About The Resource: This resource offers an interesting approach to teaching. It prompts children to identify missing letters at the beginning, middle or end of words by sounding them out. This promotes phonetic understanding and language arts skills while providing interactive learning experiences tailored specifically for ages 4 through 7. The Benefits: Promotes cognitive growth Aids linguistic aptitude expansion Versatility:: These versatile tools can be utilized within your curriculum in whole group classroom instruction or small group settings for individualized attention to particular learner needs. They can also serve as take-home assignments for after school hours reinforcement of concepts – maintaining continuity in learning efforts. Easy Usage convenience: To further ease usage convenience this product is made readily available as a PDF file format-making it easy for printouts whenever required! Your child/ren's first steps towards mastering reading writing spelling will no longer feel like giant leaps but easy strides by using Fill In The Missing Letters Worksheets (4-7 years).</em

Author Guinea Pig Education

Tags Missing Letters, Phonics, Language Arts, Early Learners, Homeschooling

Learn The Aphabet With Dan’s Dog (4-7 years)

Learn The Aphabet With Dan’s Dog (4-7 years)
ELA, Language Development, Pre-Reading, Preschool, Kindergarten, Grade 1, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets

Learn The Alphabet With Dan’s Dog (4-7 years) Setting the foundations in basic literacy for early learners is simpler with this engaging teaching resource, perfect for preschoolers through to grade 1 students. Learn the Alphabet with Dan’s Dog provides a charming and creative way for children aged 4-7 years to reinforce their understanding of alphabet letters. Presented across 27 comprehensive pages, it presents key sounds of each letter in the alphabet carefully embedded within meaningful sentences. Coupled with vibrant illustrations to kindle curiosity and reinforce retention, each page features an expression with an emphasized word that would prompt learners to identify the starting letter. For instance, young learners are encouraged to identify 'a' as a significant sound in 'act like a cat’. Mission Spelling Zero As part of our 'Mission Spelling Zero'; scheme, this resource intends not only to introduce young minds towards reading and writing but also foster their spelling abilities through structured learning patterns over time. Versatility This versatile resource covers diverse pedagogical requirements - from whole-group instructions at school or homeschooling set-ups nurturing individualized learning. They can also be used effectively within small group activities or even as focused homework assignments that engage parents too! Coverage & Format: This tool encapsulates language arts under its umbrella coverage; it targets pre-reading skills necessary at these formative ages specifically promoting growth in ‘letter-sound’ correlations. The readily printable PDF worksheets add portability and ease-of-use regardless of where learning happens - at home or classrooms. Equip your eager-to-learn students now with fun-filled adventures featuring Dan's dog whilst mastering important language lessons amidst playful exploration! Get ready for them proudly pointing out those learned letters around them! Add Learn The Alphabet With Dan’s Dog (4-7 years) resource into your teaching toolkit today!

Author Guinea Pig Education

Tags Alphabet Learning, Early Literacy, Phonics Skills, Pre-reading Activities, Language Arts

Writing And Comprehension Practice: This Is Zoggy (4-8 years)

Writing And Comprehension Practice: This Is Zoggy (4-8 years)
ELA, Language Development, Phonics, Preschool, Kindergarten, Grade 1, Worksheets & Printables, Worksheets

Writing And Comprehension Practice: This Is Zoggy (4-8 years) A teaching resource designed to boost early language arts proficiency amongst 4-8 year olds. It offers educators an excellent tool for fostering literacy skills in young learners and perfect for kindergarten and first-grade classrooms. Resource Companion This workbook complements the Mission Spelling Book: This Is Zoggy. Ideal for children working with the violet level of Mission Spelling Zero scheme, it introduces activities that reinforce lessons from the original book. Inclusive tasks: Letter sound reinforcement. Tracing and writing letters and words. A comprehension activity drawn from the story. Zoggy – A Learning Companion from Another Planet! A central feature of this nine-page interactive workbook is Zoggy, an engaging alien character with extraordinary computer skills who originated in the early books of Mission Spelling Zero series. His entertaining stories make learning initial sounds hugely enjoyable for children. Ladder to Phonics Proficiency The rainbow motif used within this educational system represents different stages or levels that learners move through. Progressively, they enhance their phonics abilities using worksheets included in this workbook, paving way to faster future learning experiences. "Writing And Comprehension Practice: This Is Zoggy" – More than Just a Workbook! This educational resource: Inspires students to improve their handwriting skills by encouraging them to form sentences independently exposing them to real-life applications of language arts learnt during class hours or homework tasks using whole group-based activities/personalized assignment methodologies weaved into the program. Integrates fun-filled games into learning to reinforce literacy notions and encourage interaction between learners, providing an enriching language arts comprehension experience throughout the early learning stages. The exciting format of Writing And Comprehension Practice: This Is Zoggy makes it a priceless tool both for public school teachers or homeschoolers alike attempting to make reading and writing less intimidating and more enjoyable for younger learners.

Author Guinea Pig Education

Tags Phonics, Early Learning, Reading Comprehension, Handwriting Practice, Interactive Learning