Trace the Tractor Tracks Pencil Control
This fun pencil control worksheet is fun for autumn, Harvest or a farm theme. Trace the tracks that the three tractors have left behind!
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This fun pencil control worksheet is fun for autumn, Harvest or a farm theme. Trace the tracks that the three tractors have left behind!
Practise writing the lower case letter "a" with this simple worksheet, which reinforces the beginning sound "a" is for apple too.
This is a set of simple A4 posters to encourage children to count apples from 0 to 10. How many apples are on the tree? We have a colour and black and white version available.
Print this fun finger tracing page - in colour or black and white - to help children practise all the letters of the alphabet. You could laminate the page and use it with dry wipe markers too.
Follow the instructions to draw dots on the snakes, and then answer the questions. Colourful dotty maths is fun!
Read the poem "The Owl and the Pussycat" by Edward Lear (we have a printable version here and a
Take a trip to the zoo to help Tom and Millie, the zookeepers, work out some of their feeding problems! This pdf includes a 2-page worksheet and a set of answers.
This set provides 2 pages, each with 4 animal "story" problems, for the children to put into algebraic expressions. We've included answers for checking.
Use this set of 2 worksheets to introduce algebraic expressions. We've included the answers, so they simply need to read and understand the question and link it to the right answer.
Print and cut out the animal cards, then use them to fill out the worksheet - for which children will have to convert lengths and heights from centimetres to metres, and weights from kilograms to grams. And why not play a "top trump" type game while you have the cards out!
This worksheet asks children to work out what the numbers are first with an animal code - and then write them as Roman numerals. It makes it more fun than your average worksheet!
These little penguins have numbers up to 100 on their eggs. Put each row into order from smallest to largest...
All these little penguins have numbers (in the hundreds) on their eggs. Can the kids put them into order from smallest to largest?
Can the kids put these numbers - all in their thousands - into order from smallest to largest?
Arrange these numbers (tens of thousands) into order, from smallest to largest. We've purposefully chosen numbers to confuse!
Practise fractions and the four operations with this fun Animal Code Breaker, aimed (roughly) at Year 4 children (aged 8-9).
This code breaker puzzle involves decimals, fractions, multiplication, division, addition and subtraction - and it's a fun way to "drill" these skills while looking for the hidden African animals in the solution. Aimed at Year 5 (aged 9-10).
Solve for n to work out which African animals are hidden in this Animal Code Breaker. We've aimed this particular code breaker at Year 6 children (aged 10-11).
Solve the problems, crack the code and reveal three animal names! This is such a fun way to work on maths skills. This particular worksheet is aimed at Year 2-3 / 6-8 year olds.
Children can draw more spots onto the snakes to work out the answer to each problem, or solve them with subtraction within 20.