In this worksheet your student will answer questions after drawing inferences from a picture.
What Conclusion Can You Make?
These sentences will help your student learn to draw conclusions.
What Happens Next?
Your student will decide what happens next in this inference worksheet.
What Is It?
Clues and conclusions are the focus of this worksheet.
Alliteration in Literature and Rhetoric
Whether in lovely literature or rollicking rhetoric, alliterations are admirable!
Character Traits and The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County
What do character traits tell us about a story? Students read a passage and determine character traits of different people.
Character Traits Worksheet – Jane Eyre
Students will read a passage from Jane Eyre and list 10 character traits of John Reed.
Character Traits Worksheet – The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
In this passage from Tom Sawyer students will list character traits of specific characters.
Character Traits Worksheet – The Time Machine
With this worksheet, students will read a passage from “The Time Machine” and list character traits from one of the characters.
Classic Literature: If
Help your students improve their reading skills with this activity set about Rudyard Kipling’s poem “If”.
Draw a Conclusion: Visual Details
Your student will use visual clues to make inferences about a group of pictures in this worksheet.
Find the Main Idea: The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
Students read a passage from The Legend of Sleepy Hollow and write the main idea and supporting ideas.
Find the Main Idea: Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
Students write the main idea and up to 5 supporting ideas after reading a short passage from the book, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, by Mark Twain.
Inference Practice 2: Where Am I?
Here’s some inference practice for your middle school student.
Personification in Literature
This worksheet has examples of personification in literature for your student to analyze.
Sherlock Holmes: Prose to Drama
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle created the character of Sherlock Holmes in the late 19th century. Students read an opening paragraph and rewrite it as a play.
Twain and Society: The Gilded Age
Mark Twain’s first novel The Gilded Age is not as famous as many of his other works, but it still tells a humorous and enlightening story of a time in American history full of wealth, excess, and greed. Students read a passage and answer questions.
















