Give first graders a sense of time by introducing them to telling time by the hour. Students who have mastered the numbers 1 to 12 will be eager to keep the class on a time schedule.
Help your child understand a.m. and p.m. by having her read each sentence, then determine if the event happened before noon (a.m.) or after noon (p.m.).
Challenge kids to think outside the digital box with these analog clock worksheets. Draw the time, write it in words, do match-ups and more. Kids will look at the hour, half-hour and quarter-hour.
Math isn't just adding and subtracting—it's about making sense of numbers and information. Practice with calendars and different types of graphs to help your child dive into data!
For this first grade math worksheet, kids practice telling time by reading digital time and converting it to analog by drawing hands on the face of a clock.
What time do you wake up in the morning or start school? Have students flex their time-telling skills by matching analog and digital clocks, all while keeping track of common morning activities.
It's time-telling time with this fun lesson featuring Trudy Harris' 'The Clock Struck One.' Students will learning about time with a short story and hands-on practice with analog clocks.
Get ready to teach all about time with a fun game that has students match the time on analog and digital clocks. Use alone or with **The Clock Struck What?**
It's about time to learn about time! Your students will interact with a class made clock and roll the dice to 'make up' a time. But they better know their hour and minute hands apart to find success in this lesson!