Reading Worksheets and Printables
These reading worksheets help make learning engaging for your child! Browse through and download our reading worksheets to help supplement your child's education.
Learning Sight Words: "Are"
Does your child need practice memorizing sight words? This worksheet will help your child learn the sight word "are" by having him fill in the blanks with the word.
Beginning Sounds: F to J
Beginning sounds are a great foundation for alphabet appreciation! Is your child beginning to learn the alphabet? This worksheet teaches the letters F through J and the sounds they make.
Vowel Sounds: Short and Long "U"
It takes a long "U" sound to make "music"! On this worksheet, a drum and a flute represent short and long "U," respectively. Kids match picture names to the items representing the corresponding vowel sound, then glue the pictures. Identifying vowel sounds is a key phonics skill for emergent readers.
Odd Word Out: Rhyming Words With "Pan"
Does your child need help with his rhyming skills? In this worksheet your child will need to look at the different objects pictured and decided which one does not rhyme with the others.
Color the Letter E
This fun alphabet coloring page will have your child coloring a big-eared elephant while learning the shape and sound of the letter E.
Its or It's?
Even some grown-ups get confused when it comes to "its" vs. "it's." Be sure your child understands the difference. This third grade writing worksheet explains that "its" is a possessive pronoun, and "it's" is a contraction that means "it is." This worksheet reinforces an important spelling concept.
Master of Disaster Vocabulary
To unlock the answer to this riddle your kid must first fill in the blanks with the different natural disasters that are being described. What is a seismic shake-up?
Odd Word Out: Rhyming Words With "Van"
To complete this activity your child will have to look at the different objects pictured, decide which one does not belong and cross it out.
An Angry Alligator: Learning the Letter A
This worksheet will help your child identify the letter a. To finish this exercise she will need to color all the shapes with a letter a in them green. When she is finished she will have discovered what animal loves swimming in swamps!
Double Trouble: Practicing Homonyms
The words indicated on this worksheet may sound and look the same, but they are "homonyms," meaning that they have different meanings. To complete this worksheet your child will need to decide what homonym each set of clues is describing.