Butterfly Colour Match Worksheet
Here's a fun way to test if the children know their colour words! Can they draw a line from each beautiful butterfly to the correct colour word?
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Here's a fun way to test if the children know their colour words! Can they draw a line from each beautiful butterfly to the correct colour word?
Here's the final part of our British butterflies guide, with two more butterflies to learn about and look for, including the Speckled Wood and the gorgeous Swallowtail!
Learn about 4 more butterflies in Part 5 of our British butterfly guide. Here we cover the Red Admiral, Small Copper, Small Pearl-Bordered Fritillary (that's a name and a half!) and the Small Tortoiseshell.
Part 4 of our British butterflies guide covers another four lovely British butterflies: the Large White, Orange Tip, Peacock and Painted Lady.
Here are four more British butterflies, that you might be lucky enough to spot in your garden or on a countryside walk. The Clouded Yellow, Comma, Essex Skipper and Grayling are all fascinating butterflies and there's lots to learn about them here.
In part 2 of our British butterflies guide we cover the Large Blue, Brown Argus, Brown Hairstreak and Chalk Hill Blue butterflies. We've packed the pages with photos and facts!
Learn about the Adonis Blue, the Common Brimstone, the Heath Fritillary and the Marbled White - all beautiful butterflies that you might be lucky enough to spot in British gardens or countryside in the summer. This is part 1 of our British butterflies guide.
Holidays and one-off events are a great excuse for getting the kids involved in crafts, colouring, projects and themed learning activities. You'll find lots of ideas here for nearly every holiday under the sun! Scroll down for a listing of holidays and events by date...
There are four lovely butterflies to trace in this pack - fun to do, and great for pencil control too. Unlike our usual tracing pages, we've gone colourful with this collection! Children can trace in the same colour, or ignore ours and use whatever colour they like!
Look at the picture and then answer the questions - on a recycling theme.
Use the excuse of a princess and her castle to try a fun picture comprehension worksheet! We've varied the questions on these resources so that they are good for developing both observational and creative writing skills.
Look at this fun picture of pirates at sea and then answer the questions! We've included some creative thinking and writing opportunities as well as testing observational skills.
Take a trip to the farm with this fun picture comprehension worksheet, which tests your child's observational skills as well as providing opportunities for thinking and creative writing!
Our picture comprehensions are a fun way to encourage the kids to look, think, write and draw - and this one uses a fun bike ride scene as the starting point.
This picture captures the excitement of a family camping trip - and this picture comprehension is a fun way to encourage the kids to observe, think, write and draw!
Here's a comprehension worksheet with a difference - it's based on a picture, rather than a piece of writing. We ask children to look at the picture of children enjoying a playground then answer some simple questions, start a story and draw a picture.
All the fun of the fair in a comprehension worksheet! This picture comprehension asks children to study the picture of a day out at the fairground and answer a series of simple questions. There's also chance to start writing your own story, and draw a picture too.
This lovely picture of a fun day at the seaside is used for comprehension question which test your child's observation skills - but also ask for some creative writing and drawing too!
This picture comprehension asks children to study the picture of a family visiting an aquarium, then answer the question. We've included space for creative writing and a picture of your own, too.
These pretty butterfly images can be used for crafts or just for cutting and sticking. The antennae may have to be chopped off as you cut them out, of course! You can always draw them in again when the butterflies are in their new place.