ELA Test Prep Worksheets Language Arts Review Print & Digital Activity
Common Core, Holiday & Seasonal, Language Development, ELA, Grammar, Spelling, Vocabulary, April, Months
Activities, Assessments, Teacher Tools, Tests, Quizzes and Tests, Quizzes, Worksheets & Printables, Rubrics
About This Product
Looking for ELA test prep worksheets that actually help your students review without feeling like another boring test? If your students tend to switch off during review time, you might find this resource a lot easier to manage. It’s designed to give you a solid language arts review while keeping things clear, structured, and purposeful—especially in the lead-up to testing. You can use this as a quick pre-assessment, a focused revision lesson, or even as a full practice test. I’ve used it in all three ways, depending on where my class is at.
What’s included:
60-question ELA test prep worksheet (PDF) for print use
Matching digital version (Google Forms) – self-checking
Questions covering spelling, grammar, vocabulary, and punctuation
A mix of multiple choice, checkbox, and short response
Answer key for quick marking (or no marking at all with digital)
Why this works
What tends to happen with test prep is students either rush… or completely overthink it. This set helps balance that. The questions are varied enough to keep students thinking, but still familiar in format—so they’re building confidence as they go. You’ll also start to notice patterns in errors (especially with punctuation and sentence structure), which makes your follow-up teaching much more targeted. And honestly, the digital version saves a lot of time. The instant feedback alone is worth it.
Ideal for
Grades 3–5 (and useful for early Grade 6 review)
End-of-term revision
Standardized test preparation
Homework or independent review
How it can be used
Whole-class test prep session
Small group targeted revision
Literacy centers
Early finishers
Independent practice before assessment
Pre-test or post-test check-in
Skills covered
Spelling
Grammar
Punctuation
Vocabulary
Parts of speech
Sentence structure
Clause structure
If you’re needing something straightforward that gives you a clear snapshot of where your students are at (without hours of prep), this tends to do the job really well.





