Interactive Worksheets bring printable worksheets to life! Students can complete worksheets online, and get instant feedback to improve.
How do they work?
Open an Interactive Worksheet, and create a direct link to share with students. They’ll enter their code to access the worksheet, complete it online, and get instant feedback. You can keep track of submissions in My Assignments.
In this worksheet, learners will complete a camping-themed word search puzzle, then answer a prompt inviting them to describe their favorite camping activity or memory.
These picture names are each missing the first two letters which make a consonant blend. Kids choose the correct blend and write it to complete the word.
Distinguishing between long and short vowel sounds is one of the first steps in mastering vowels. Gauge student understanding of long and short vowels with this review activity.
What is your favorite animal? Answer this question and many more in this creative writing worksheet in which young writers can practice writing sentences.
Kids rewrite incorrect sentences to gain practice with sentence structure, capitalization, and punctuation on this first grade reading and writing worksheet.
Silent "e" worksheets are important to phonics success. In this silent "e" worksheet, kids learn how to make silent "e" words out of long vowels sounds.
Children will learn how to make subjects and verbs agree, and then practice completing ten sentences with the correct verb, in this appealing grammar worksheet.
Begin to plant the writing seed in young learners with our first grade grammar worksheets. Thanks to delightful illustrations and colorful characters, kids will be begging you to print out these fun lessons that teach everything from plural nouns and parts of speech to sentence structure and capitalization. After practicing with our first grade grammar worksheets, students will enter second grade full of writing competence and confidence.
First Grade Grammar Worksheets Get the Writing Ball Rolling
In first grade, children are introduced to adjectives, adverbs, conjunctions, tense agreement, capitalization, and other complicated principles of grammar. One way to stop your child's head from spinning with all this new information is to print out our first grade grammar worksheets.
If your child appears completely overwhelmed, start slowly with letter-specific “Words That Begin With” review lessons. Not only do these particular first grade grammar worksheets offer professionally illustrated picture clues, but each word corresponds to a fill in the blank question. So all at once children can practice their reading, vocabulary, object identification, and penmanship skills.
As the year progresses and children better understand things like parts of speech and singular vs plural words, let them flex their creativity muscles by trying our “Fill-in a Funny Story” pages. Here, students are asked to choose their own descriptive words to complete a story that follows a certain theme (think “Mad Libs” for first graders).
Finally, keep the grammar practice going in a more informal way by asking your child to identify adjectives and pronouns during bedtime reading, and pick out capital letters on cereal boxes.