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MEHNAZ B

3-6year olds,Grade 0 -2 worksheets???? where can I get from??

Does anyone know where I can get some worksheets from for the kids??? I teach the 3-6year olds which is basically the grade 0,1 & 2’s. Any ideas??

For maths,english,geography & culturals (continents,body,animals, etc)

Top 4 Answers
nl8uprly

Favorite Answer

Teacher supply stores.

http://www.education-world.com/

http://www.abcteach.com/

http://www.edhelper.com/

http://school.discovery.com/

http://www.busyteacherscafe.com/

http://www.eduplace.com/

1

4 years ago
froedge
Www Busyteacherscafe Com Worksheets
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sam95murphy
I wouldn’t necessarily use worksheets for your class, especially with such a wide range of ages and abilities. Children of that age still love to do hands-on activities, and you’re more likely to get a better response from the kids when doing an experiment, playing a game, or crafting. However, in certain times, I WOULD have the children sit down and do a worksheet, because it gets them ready for further schooling. Simple and cheap workbooks or coloring books have great materials for the younger ones. For the older kids (probably from 5-6 years old) I would make up a few sheets on the computer, keeping in mind the skill level of your kids and themes of your classroom.

Some all purpose, easy sheet ideas:

English: Simple writing prompts, like “What do you like to do in the summer?” or “What is your favorite pet and why?” Have the smaller kids write or speak a sentence to you and draw a picture; older kids should at least write three sentences. For English also: Fill in the blank sheets, where you dictate a sentence to them and the kids must fill in the missing word(s) [Best with 6 year olds]

Math: Picture sheets (can be found in workbooks or online as well), where younger kids count up the total and the older ones may be able to perform simple addition and subtraction (What is the total of the first two rows? How many total are there with out the first three rows?)

Geography: Draw maps of the classroom (littler kids can have an outline drawn for them), or provide each student with a map of a common area (the park, the school).–have kids identify each place and say where one place is in relation to another. Example for a park: Is the slide next to the jungle gym or basketball hoop? (For older kids, use right, left, etc).

Hope this helps….

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Anonymous
Teacher supply stores have lots of books with this kind of stuff in them. Sometimes you can find them on websites too, like scholastic.com. But my best advice to you is not to use worksheets. Sometimes they are effective, but students this age usually learn best when “doing” something active, not filling out a worksheet. So perhaps you can plan some lessons that involve games, group work, exploration, and things like that.
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