What's New on STW
We add new printable worksheets, games, and teaching tools all the time! This page highlights some of our most recent additions to the site.
4,568 new files added over the past 365 days.
(added December 12, 2024)
In week 13 of fourth grade ELA Buzz, students will work on spelling, commonly confused words, proper nouns, punctuation, and more.
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(added December 12, 2024)
Keep building and maintaining second-grade language arts skills with these daily spiral review worksheets. Practice proofreading, spelling, and more with this week's set.
(added December 12, 2024)
Review key ELA concepts such as verbs, reading comprehension, contractions, and more this week with our daily language arts worksheets.
(added December 12, 2024)
Print off this page and have students practice their question words. They'll have to decide which of the four given question words completes each sentence.
(added December 12, 2024)
Students will cut out the words to form the question When is your birthday? They will also write the sentence on their own and color the picture.
(added December 12, 2024)
This cut-and-glue worksheet asks students to cut out the words to form a sentence using the question word where. They can then color the picture and rewrite the sentence on the primary-ruled lines.
(added December 11, 2024)
Students will make the sentence Who is your best friend? with this worksheet. They can cut and glue the words in the correct order, rewrite the sentence, and color the picture.
(added December 11, 2024)
Make a complete sentence using the words at the bottom of the page, including the question word why. The completed sentence is Why are you tired? Students can color in the picture too.
(added December 11, 2024)
Can your students make a complete question sentence with the words they cut out from the page? The sentence should read What time is it?
(added December 11, 2024)
Cut out the words and arrange them to make a complete sentence. Then write the sentence on the primary lines and color the picture. This sentence reads How do you feel?
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(added December 11, 2024)
Print off this page to hang in your classroom or review with students and have them color the pictures. The page shows each of the six basic question words and how they may be used in an interrogative sentence or statement.
(added December 11, 2024)
Cut out each of the question words at the bottom of the page and paste them at the beginning of the correct sentence.
(added December 11, 2024)
Use these cards to prompt engaging conversation as your class reads The Mitten.
(added December 10, 2024)
Use these cut-out cards to prompt discussion with students during or after a read aloud of If You Give a Mouse a Cookie.
(added December 10, 2024)
With this week's set of daily ELA review worksheets, second graders will focus on building and maintaining skills related to vowel teams, adjectives, plural nouns, capitalization, and more.
(added December 9, 2024)
This week in 4th grade ELA Buzz, students will review skills like idioms, synonyms, spelling, suffixes, homographs, and more.
(added December 9, 2024)
Keep on practicing those ELA skills with our daily spiral review series. Language arts standards such as proofreading, prepositions, and possessive nouns are just some of the many topics covered this week.
(added December 4, 2024)
This anchor chart explains algebraic expressions, variables, terms, coefficients, constants, algebraic equations, and algebraic inequalities while using examples along the way.
(added December 4, 2024)
This reference chart is a great resource for students to study and remember different terms related to evaluating and writing algebraic expressions and equations.
(added December 4, 2024)
The math words and phrases on these vocabulary cards will help students be able to understand, write, and evaluate algebraic expressions. Terms include coefficient, constant, dependent variable, exponent, operations, inequality, and more.
(added December 2, 2024)
Compound words, common and proper nouns, vowel teams, trigraphs, and verb tense are just a handful of the language arts skills students will practice with this week's set of ELA Buzz worksheets.
(added December 2, 2024)
Make sure those ELA skills stay sharp with this set of daily review exercises. Each day students work on a variety of language arts skills such as vowel sounds, title capitalization, punctuation, and more.
¿Habla español?
Many of our worksheets have been translated into Spanish! Click the button below worksheet descriptions to view our Spanish translations. Learn more.
Many of our worksheets have been translated into Spanish! Click the button below worksheet descriptions to view our Spanish translations. Learn more.
(added December 2, 2024)
Make sure your 5th graders keep up on their ELA skills with these daily review worksheets. Each day they'll touch on important language arts skills such as spelling, punctuation, parts of speech, and more.
(added December 2, 2024)
Work on more 5th grade ELA skills with these daily review worksheets. This week's set of language arts exercises touches on topics such as plural possessives, capitalization, relative adverbs, and more.
(added November 20, 2024)
This early-elementary reading passage is perfect for those just getting a handle on independent reading. Have students follow along as you read it, or let them try it on their own. Then they can answer the questions that follow!
(added November 20, 2024)
This short passage is about a little fish looking to play. Practice reading comprehension and early writings skills with the worksheets that follow.
(added November 18, 2024)
Gobble up this step by step activity that shows you just how easy it is to draw a turkey. When your drawing is complete, take it to the next level and color it.
(added November 18, 2024)
Here is a step by step activity that shows you just how easy it is to draw a butterfly. When your drawing is complete, take it to the next level and color it.
(added November 18, 2024)
Bring your fantasy to life by drawing this beautiful castle. Follow these step by step directions to create this masterpiece.
(added November 18, 2024)
Illuminate your drawing skills by following these step by step directions to create a fun lighthouse.
(added November 18, 2024)
These step by step directions will make drawing a windmill a breeze.
(added November 18, 2024)
Reach for the stars by drawing this fantastic rocket ship. Follow these step by step directions to draw an out of this world rocket ship.
(added November 15, 2024)
Enhance your appositives practice with this class set of 30 task cards. Question types include: identifying appositives in sentences, combining sentences using an appositive, adding one or two commas to offset nonrestrictive appositives, and writing appositives for given antecedents.
(added November 15, 2024)
Nonrestrictive (nonessential) and restrictive (essential) appositives are punctuated differently in sentences. Identify the appositive phrase examples with answers provided on a separate key.
(added November 15, 2024)
The nonrestrictive examples on this appositive phrase worksheet aren't just offset by commas, but colons, em dashes, and parentheses too! Students must identify the restrictive or nonrestrictive appositive in each sentence, underline it, and circle its antecedent.
(added November 15, 2024)
Start off your appositives and appositive phrase practice with this worksheet. Seven of twelve sentences contain an appositive. Identify which ones they are. Be careful; commas alone won't give them away!
(added November 15, 2024)
Use this free appositives worksheet to teach your learners about the essential parts of an appositive. It explains the two kinds of appositives with models, then asks students to identify appositives and their antecedents in ten examples.
(added November 15, 2024)
Teach the punctuation differences between restrictive and nonrestrictive words and phrases with this printable appositive worksheet. Includes labeled explanations and 8 practice questions.
(added November 15, 2024)
This fun appositive phrase worksheet uses 14 nonrestrictive phrases (and 1 nonrestrictive word!) related to fossils. Depending on their placement in each sentence, they must have one or commas added to offset them.
(added November 15, 2024)
Read through the 15 sentences on this appositives worksheet, decide whether an essential or nonessential appositive is used, and then add any necessary commas that are missing.
(added November 15, 2024)
If you're wondering how to diagram an appositive, look no further! Appositive words or phrases are placed in parentheses, and the rest of the sentence is diagrammed as normal. (Extra-long phrases sometimes need a whole separate line extending from the parenthetical to fit properly!)
(added November 15, 2024)
This appositive worksheet focuses on creating original appositive words and/or phrases for underlined antecedents. Students can refer to the explanation and example at the top of the sheet before revising the sentences.
(added November 15, 2024)
Looking for more appositives and appositive phrases practice? Students must come up with five more nonrestrictive and two more restrictive appositives to add to existing sentences.
(added November 15, 2024)
Learn how to punctuate appositive sentences with this reference sheet. Color-coded examples show both restrictive and nonrestrictive appositives in sentences and explain how punctuation (or lack thereof) can completely change their meaning.
Defining Appositives FREE
(added November 15, 2024)
What is an appositive? This free anchor chart includes a basic definition and four labeled examples of sentences with nonrestrictive appositives in different locations. One example demonstrates how appositives can be used to join together two short, choppy sentences.
(added November 14, 2024)
On this worksheet, students will color the word, color the letters in the word, trace the word, and write the word in a sentence.
(added November 14, 2024)
Students will trace and circle the word friend. Then they'll cut out the letters and glue them on the paper to make the word.
(added November 14, 2024)
Trace the word. Write it in the sentence. Then draw a picture.
(added November 14, 2024)
Use glitter, stickers, or markers to trace the giant sight word.