Using Irregular Verbs: Past Tense

For some verbs, we don’t use -ed to form the past tense. Instead, we use a completely different word. With this printable activity, students will be asked to fill in the blank of each sentence with the past tense form of the verb that is given. For example, change to present tense of the verb, sit, to the past tense of the verb, sat.

Verb Endings: -ed

When something happened in the past, a verb should be in the past tense. For many words, adding the ending -ed to the verb makes it past tense. For example, by adding -ed onto the verb, talk, it becomes the past tense verb, talked. With this helpful activity, students will practice rewriting present tense verbs in the past tense.

Verb Tense Stories

Circle the verbs. Write each one in the past tense form.

Vowel Diagraphs

Students practice phonics and spelling in this worksheet on vowel diagraphs, writing vowels pairs for common words, then identifying the diagraphs.

Vowel Team Bingo

Here’s a fun bingo game to help your student learn about vowels.

Vowel Teams: EE and EA

This worksheet is a great practice for recognizing and using the vowel teams ‘ee’ and ‘ea’.

Vowel Teams: OO and OA

It’s time to work with the vowel teams of ‘oo’ and ‘oa’!

What’s the Root Word?

A root word is a word that can be made into a new word by adding a prefix or a suffix. With this educational worksheet on root words, determine what the suffix or the prefix is in order to find the root!

Who Is a Character?

In this activity, students read the sentence and then circle the word that describes the character.

Winter Adjectives: Shades of Meaning

Teach your students how to put adjectives in order from weakest to strongest in this winter activity for elementary grade levels.

Word Lists: Write a Sentence

Your youngster can combine words from a noun list and a verb list to make a sentence.

Would You Rather Questions For Kids

Try our printable deck of 52 “Would You Rather” questions for an instant conversation starter any time you need one. This activity is great for encouraging thinking outside of the box as it includes questions that welcome creative thinking! Our deck of “Would You Rather” questions can be used at home or in the classroom by both parents and teachers, whether it is for an oral exercise, written exercise, or cross-curricular exercise.

Write a Noun for Adjectives

Identifying parts of speech is an important skill to learn in early education! With this printable activity, students will practice writing nouns and adjectives. After reading through a series of adjectives, students will be asked to write a noun for each adjective to describe.

Write About a State

In this worksheet, your student can practice writing informational text.

Write About It: The Leprechaun’s Wishes

Your students just found an Irish leprechaun under their bed and get offered three wishes. Let’s find our what your students wish for!

Write an Acrostic Poem

This acrostic poem worksheet will introduce your youngster to poetry!

3-D: It’s not Just For Movies

Week 26 Reading Comprehension (B-26). A passage about dimensional objects like cubes and pyramids. Cross-Curricular Focus: Mathematics.