Grade 1

Ages 5–6 — Start your learning adventure!

🔢
Maths
Numbers, counting & shapes
🔬
Science
Plants, animals & senses
📖
English
Letters, phonics & reading

📋 Standardised Tests

🇬🇧
British Curriculum
UK Year 1 — Maths, English & Science
🇺🇸
American Curriculum
US Kindergarten — Math, ELA & Science

Grade 1: Maths

Discover numbers, shapes, and more!

🔢
Counting to 100
Learn to count by ones and tens
➕➖
Addition & Subtraction
Put together and take away
🔷
Shapes
Flat and solid shapes all around
📏
Measurement
Length, weight, and time
✖️➗
Multiply & Divide
Groups, sharing, and arrays
🍕
Fractions
Halves and quarters
🧭
Position & Direction
Left, right, turns, and patterns
💰
Money
Coins, notes, and counting money

📊 Previous Tests

Grade 1: Science

Explore the living world!

🌱
Plants
Roots, stems, leaves, and flowers
🐾
Animals
Different animals and their homes
🧱
Materials
Wood, plastic, metal, and more
👀
Senses
See, hear, touch, taste, and smell
🌍
Seasonal Changes
Spring, summer, autumn, and winter

📊 Previous Tests

Grade 1: English

Learn to read and write!

🔤
Alphabet & Phonics
Letters and their sounds
📖
Reading Basics
Words, sentences, and stories
✏️
Writing
Create your own words and stories
🎨
Vocabulary
Learn new words every day
✍️
Spelling
CVC words, digraphs, and patterns

📊 Previous Tests

Counting to 100

Learn to count higher and higher!

What is Counting?

Counting means saying numbers in order: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and so on. When you count, you are putting a number on each thing you see.

When you count, touch each thing as you say the number. One dot — say "one." Next dot — say "two." Next dot — say "three." This is called one-to-one correspondence. It means each number matches one thing.

The last number you say tells you "how many" there are. If you count to 5, you have 5 things.

Counting helps you know how many toys you have, how many snacks are left, or how many friends are playing. It is very useful in everyday life!

1 2 3 4 5
Did You Know? When you count, each number is one more than the last! Point to each circle and count: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.

Skip Counting

Skip counting means counting by the same number each time. You skip over some numbers to count faster!

Counting by 2s: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12... Skip counting by 2s is like counting: 1 pair, 2 pairs, 3 pairs. We say 2, 4, 6!

Counting by 5s: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25... Counting by 5s is fast! It helps us count coins and fingers.

Counting by 10s: 10, 20, 30, 40, 50... When you count by 10s, you are counting tens (groups of 10). This helps us count to 100 faster!

Odd and Even: Some numbers end in 2, 4, 6, 8, 0 — these are even. Some numbers end in 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 — these are odd. Example: 2, 4, 6 are even. 1, 3, 5 are odd.

Ten-Frame = 10 A ten-frame shows 10 boxes. When all are full, you have 10!
Skip Counting Chant: Count by 10s with me: 10, 20, 30, 40, 50!

Practice Counting

Here is a number line. It helps you count from 1 to 20:

1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19

Exercise 1: Count the stars. How many stars do you see? Touch each one and count.

Exercise 2: Missing Number. What number comes next? 1, 2, ___, 4. Look at the number line if you need help!

Exercise 3: Counting in Groups. Count these dots in groups of 2. How many groups? How many dots total?

Point to each star and count out loud! You are a counting superstar!

Counting Games

Game 1: Finger Counting. Hold up your fingers one at a time. Count: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10! How many fingers do you have on both hands?

Game 2: Step Counting. Walk and count your steps out loud. Start at 1. Keep going until you reach 20! Did you make it?

Game 3: Counting Backwards. This is counting the other way! Start at 10 and count down: 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, ZERO! Blast off!

Game 4: "What Comes Next?" Someone says a number. You say the next number. Example: I say "5," you say "6!" Try it!

Game 5: The Hundred Chart. A hundred chart is a big grid with numbers 1 to 100. You can use it to find numbers, skip count, and see patterns. Can you find number 50 on the hundred chart?

Counting Games Finger Counting 5 + 5 = 10! Step Counting 1 2 3 4 Walk & count! Countdown! 10, 9, 8... Blast off! What Comes Next? 5 ? You say 6! The Hundred Chart (first 3 rows) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 ... all the way to 100!
These games make counting fun! You can play them with friends or family anytime!

Real-World Counting Challenges!

Challenge 1: Count the Coins. Ask an adult for some coins. Count them: 1 penny, 2 pennies, 3 pennies. How many coins do you have?

Challenge 2: Count Steps to the Kitchen. Walk from your room to the kitchen. Count each step out loud. How many steps did it take? Try it again. Is it the same number?

Challenge 3: Counting Song. Many songs help you count. Search for "Count to 100 song" online and sing along! It makes counting super fun and helps you remember the numbers.

Challenge 4: Count Items at Home. Count the chairs in your kitchen. Count the windows in your bedroom. Count the toys in your toy box. How many of each do you have?

Your Turn! Can you count from 1 to 50 without stopping? Once you can do that, try counting to 100! You are becoming a counting champion!

Quiz Time!

Addition & Subtraction

Put together and take away!

Adding Numbers

Adding means putting groups together. When you add, you find how many you have altogether.

Putting Together: If you have 2 apples and your friend gives you 1 apple, you put them together. 2 + 1 = 3. Now you have 3 apples!

Counting On: Another way to add is to start with the bigger number and count on. For 2 + 3, say "2" (the bigger number is 3, but start where the smaller one is). Then count: "3, 4, 5." You have 5!

Doubles: Doubles are fun! When you add the same number twice: 1 + 1 = 2, 2 + 2 = 4, 3 + 3 = 6. Try it!

Commutative Property (Order doesn't matter): You can add in any order! 2 + 3 = 5 AND 3 + 2 = 5. Same answer! Try it with dots.

2 + 3 = 5 + = Number Line Jump: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Key Point: When you add, always count all the groups and count carefully. Use your fingers to help if you need to!

Subtracting Numbers

Subtracting means taking away. When you subtract, you find how many are left.

Taking Away: If you have 5 crayons and you lose 2, you subtract. 5 − 2 = 3. Now you have 3 crayons left.

Counting Back: You can subtract by counting backwards. For 5 − 2, start at 5 and count back 2 steps: "5... 4, 3." You get 3! Using a number line helps.

Cross Out: Draw 5 circles. Cross out 2. Count what is left. That's your answer!

Comparison Subtraction (How many more?): Sometimes we subtract to compare. If you have 7 stickers and your friend has 4 stickers, how many MORE do you have? 7 − 4 = 3. You have 3 more!

Fact Families: Addition and subtraction are family! If 2 + 3 = 5, then 5 − 3 = 2 and 5 − 2 = 3. They are connected!

5 − 2 = 3 (Cross Out Method) = 3 left Number Line (Counting Back): Start: 5 Back 1
Subtraction Tip: Use your fingers, draw dots, or use a number line. It all helps you subtract correctly!

Word Stories (Problems)

Word problems tell a story with numbers. You need to figure out if you add or subtract.

Story 1 (Joining - Adding): Mia had 3 toy cars. Her mom gave her 2 more. How many toy cars does she have now? We put together, so we add: 3 + 2 = 5 toy cars!

Story 2 (Separating - Subtracting): Sam had 6 cookies. He ate 2. How many cookies are left? We take away, so we subtract: 6 − 2 = 4 cookies left.

Story 3 (Comparing - Subtracting): There are 8 red balloons and 5 blue balloons. How many more red balloons are there? We compare with subtraction: 8 − 5 = 3 more red balloons.

Story 4 (Joining - Adding): In the morning, there were 4 birds in the tree. In the afternoon, 3 more birds came. How many birds are in the tree now? 4 + 3 = 7 birds.

Story 5 (Separating - Subtracting): Leo had 9 crayons. He lost 3. How many crayons does he have now? 9 − 3 = 6 crayons left.

Key Words to Look For: "put together" or "altogether" means add. "take away," "left," or "ate" means subtract. "How many more?" means subtract to compare.

Story: 3 + 2 = 5 + = Mia now has 5 apples!
How to Solve: Read the story. Draw dots or use your fingers. Figure out if you add or subtract. Count to find the answer!

Practice Time

Add Within 5: Practice adding when your answer is 5 or less.

  • 1 + 1 = ?
  • 2 + 1 = ?
  • 2 + 2 = ?
  • 3 + 2 = ?
  • 4 + 1 = ?

Add Within 10: Now practice adding when your answer is 10 or less.

  • 3 + 3 = ?
  • 4 + 2 = ?
  • 5 + 3 = ?
  • 6 + 2 = ?
  • 7 + 2 = ?

Subtract Within 5: Practice taking away from numbers 5 or less.

  • 2 − 1 = ?
  • 3 − 1 = ?
  • 4 − 2 = ?
  • 5 − 1 = ?
  • 5 − 3 = ?

Subtract Within 10: Practice taking away from numbers 10 or less.

  • 6 − 2 = ?
  • 7 − 3 = ?
  • 8 − 2 = ?
  • 9 − 4 = ?
  • 10 − 5 = ?
Ten-Frame for Addition: 6 + 3 = 9 6 (full row) + 3 = 9
Practice Tip: Use your fingers, draw dots, or use a ten-frame. Check your work every time!

Fun Games to Play!

Game 1: Dice Addition. Roll two dice. Add the numbers together. For example, if you roll a 4 and a 3, add them: 4 + 3 = 7. Keep rolling!

Game 2: Domino Addition. Find dominoes at home. Each side has dots. Add the dots on both sides together. Example: 3 dots + 5 dots = 8 dots!

Game 3: Making 10. Use toys, blocks, or buttons. Can you make 10 by combining two groups? Try 6 + 4. Try 7 + 3. Try 8 + 2!

Game 4: Snack Sharing (Subtraction). You have 10 crackers. You give 3 to your friend. How many do you have left? 10 − 3 = 7!

Real-World Examples: Count crayons in different colors and add them up. Add the number of chairs and tables at dinner. Take away toys as you clean up and count what's left!

Challenge: Can you find 5 things at home to add together? Count them all and find the total!

Quiz Time!

Shapes

Flat and solid shapes all around!

Flat Shapes

Flat shapes are shapes you can draw on paper. They are completely flat with no thickness.

Circle: A circle is round like a ball. It has no corners and no straight sides. It is perfectly round all the way around. A circle has 0 sides and 0 corners.

Square: A square has 4 equal sides. All sides are the same length! It has 4 corners. Squares look like boxes when you draw them. A square has 4 sides and 4 corners.

Triangle: A triangle has 3 sides and 3 corners. The three sides connect at the corners. Triangles are pointy! Look for triangles on road signs.

Rectangle: A rectangle looks like a square's cousin. It has 4 sides and 4 corners, but the sides are not all equal. Two sides are longer, and two sides are shorter. A rectangle has 4 sides and 4 corners.

Hexagon: A hexagon has 6 sides and 6 corners. It looks like a stop sign (but stop signs are octagons with 8 sides!). Beehives are made of hexagons!

Flat Shapes Circle 0 sides, 0 corners Square 4 sides, 4 corners Triangle 3 sides, 3 corners Rectangle 4 sides, 4 corners Hexagon 6 sides, 6 corners
Shape Properties Table: Sides and corners help you identify shapes. Count them carefully!

Solid Shapes (3D Shapes)

Solid shapes are 3D (three-dimensional). You can hold them in your hand! They have height, width, and depth.

Sphere: A sphere is like a ball. It is round and smooth. A basketball, soccer ball, or orange is a sphere. It has no flat sides and no corners. A sphere can roll!

Cube: A cube is like a box. It has 6 faces (flat sides), and all the faces are squares. A dice is a cube. It has 8 corners and 12 edges. You can stack cubes!

Cylinder: A cylinder looks like a can or a tube. It has 2 circle faces on top and bottom, and 1 curved side. A soup can or a paper towel roll is a cylinder. It can roll!

Cone: A cone looks like an ice cream cone or a traffic cone. It has 1 circle face and comes to a point at the top. A cone is pointy at the end!

Solid Shapes (3D) Sphere Like a ball Cube Like a box Cylinder Like a can Cone Like ice cream
Feel the Difference: Find a ball (sphere), a dice (cube), a can (cylinder), and a cone-shaped toy. Touch each one and feel how different they are!

Shape Patterns

Patterns are shapes (or colors) that repeat in order. When you know the pattern, you can guess what comes next!

AB Pattern: This pattern has 2 shapes that repeat. Circle, Square, Circle, Square, Circle, Square... The next shape is a Circle!

ABC Pattern: This pattern has 3 shapes that repeat. Circle, Square, Triangle, Circle, Square, Triangle... The next shape is a Circle!

Shape and Color Patterns: Patterns can use color too! Red Circle, Blue Circle, Red Circle, Blue Circle... The pattern changes color!

Growing Patterns: Some patterns grow bigger. 1 circle, 2 circles, 3 circles, 4 circles. The number increases!

What Comes Next? ? AB Pattern: Circle, Square, Circle, Square, Circle, Square, ___ Answer: Circle! The pattern repeats every 2 shapes.
Pattern Challenge: Look at these shapes. Can you figure out what comes next? Triangle, Circle, Triangle, Circle, Triangle, Circle, ___?

Shapes in the World

Shapes are everywhere! You can find them in nature and all around your home.

Circles: The sun is a circle. Plates are circles. Wheels on a car are circles. Pizza is a circle. Clocks are circles. Buttons are small circles!

Squares and Rectangles: Windows are rectangles. Door frames are rectangles. Books are rectangles. Tiles on the floor are squares. Picture frames are rectangles!

Triangles: Roofs on houses are triangles. Slices of pizza are triangles. Some road signs are triangles. Camping tents make a triangle shape!

Shapes in Your House: Doors are rectangles. Tables are rectangles or squares. Lamps are cylinders. A tissue box is a cube. Your bed is a rectangle!

Shapes Outside: Trees have a trunk (cylinder) and leaves (circle at the top). Flowers have petals. Stones are spheres. Clouds have no shape — they change!

Symmetry: Some shapes are symmetrical. This means they look the same on both sides. A butterfly is symmetrical — the left side looks like the right side! Fold a piece of paper and cut a shape. When you open it, both sides match!

Shapes All Around Us House Ball Can Butterfly
Shape Hunt Challenge: Walk around your home. Find 5 things that are circles, 5 rectangles, 3 triangles, and 2 cubes. Draw or point to them!

Shape Fun Activities!

Activity 1: Drawing Challenge. Can you draw a circle? A square? A triangle? Try drawing different shapes on paper. Start with big shapes, then try smaller ones!

Activity 2: Building with Shapes. Use blocks, boxes, or everyday items to build. Make a tower with cubes. Make a circle with blocks. Can you build a house shape?

Activity 3: Tangram Puzzle. A tangram is a puzzle made from 7 shapes. You rearrange them to make different pictures. It's like magic! Look for tangram puzzles online or in toy stores.

Activity 4: "I Spy" Shapes Game. Say "I spy with my little eye, a shape that is a circle!" Your friend looks around and finds circles in the room. Then it's their turn!

Activity 5: Shape Collage. Cut out pictures of circles, squares, triangles, and other shapes from magazines. Glue them on paper to make a collage. You now have a shape poster!

Super Fun: Hunt for shapes during a nature walk! Find rocks, pinecones, leaves, and flowers. What shapes are they?

Quiz Time!

Measurement

Length, weight, and time!

Length

Length tells us how long or tall something is. We compare lengths by looking at things side by side.

Comparing Lengths: Is your pencil longer or shorter than your finger? Is your bed longer or shorter than your doorway? We can say "longer," "shorter," or "the same length."

Non-Standard Measuring: Before we learn inches and centimeters, we can measure with things we have! Use paper clips to measure. Count: "This pencil is 7 paper clips long!" Use hand spans. Count: "My desk is 6 hand spans wide!" Use blocks or steps.

Standard Units: Inches and centimeters are standard units. Everyone agrees on how long an inch is and how long a centimeter is. We use rulers to measure in inches and centimeters.

Using a Ruler: Line up the 0 on the ruler with the start of the object. See where it ends. That's the length! A pencil might be 7 inches long. Your hand span might be 4 inches wide.

Estimation: Before you measure, guess! Is the pencil longer or shorter than your hand? When you guess before measuring, it's called estimation. Then check with a ruler!

Measuring with a Ruler 0 5 10 15 This pencil is 12 inches long!
Try It: Measure your pencil with a ruler. How many inches is it? Now measure your finger. Which is longer?

Weight

Weight tells us how heavy something is. Some things are light (like feathers), and some things are heavy (like rocks).

Comparing Weights: Is a book heavier or lighter than a pencil? Pick them both up and feel! Is a watermelon heavier or lighter than an apple? We can say "heavier," "lighter," or "about the same weight."

Balance Scale: A balance scale has two sides. Put one object on each side. If one side goes down, that object is heavier! A feather is very light, so that side stays up. A book is heavier, so that side goes down.

Non-Standard Weighing: You can weigh things using blocks or other objects! "This toy weighs 5 blocks" means if you stack 5 blocks, they weigh the same as the toy!

Ordering by Weight: Line up three objects. Put them in order from lightest to heaviest. Example: a feather is lightest, a block is heavier, a book is heaviest!

Estimation: Before you weigh something, guess! Is a pillow heavier or lighter than a dictionary? Then weigh them and check!

Balance Scale Heavier Lighter The heavier side goes down!
Weight Activity: Collect 5 objects of different weights. Order them from lightest to heaviest. Use a balance scale if you have one!

Telling Time on an Analog Clock

An analog clock is a round clock with numbers and hands that move. Let's learn to read it step by step!

Step 1: Know the Clock Face

A clock has a round face with the numbers 1 through 12 arranged in a circle. The number 12 is always at the very top, and 6 is at the bottom. The numbers go clockwise — that means they go in the same direction the hands move.

The Clock Face 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 is at the top 6 is at the bottom 3 is on the right 9 is on the left Numbers go clockwise 1, 2, 3, 4... around the circle Tip: Think of a pizza! Cut into 12 slices = 12 numbers

Step 2: The Two Hands

A clock has two important hands that point to the numbers:

The short, thick hand is the hour hand. It tells us what hour it is. It moves slowly — it takes a whole hour to move from one number to the next!

The long, thin hand is the minute hand. It tells us the minutes. It moves faster — it goes all the way around the clock in one hour (60 minutes).

The Two Hands 12 3 6 9 1 2 4 5 7 8 10 11 = Hour Hand Short and thick Moves slowly (1 number per hour) = Minute Hand Long and thin Moves faster (all around in 1 hour) This clock shows 3:00 — hour hand on 3, minute hand on 12

Step 3: O'Clock Times (When the Minute Hand Points to 12)

The easiest times to read! When the long minute hand points straight up to 12, it's "something o'clock." Just look at where the short hour hand is pointing — that's the hour!

O'Clock Times — minute hand always on 12 12 3 6 9 3:00 3 o'clock 12 3 6 9 7 7:00 7 o'clock 12 3 6 9 12:00 12 o'clock Remember! Minute hand on 12 = o'clock Just read the hour hand!

Step 4: Half Past (When the Minute Hand Points to 6)

When the long minute hand points straight down to 6, it has gone halfway around the clock. That's 30 minutes — we call it "half past." The hour hand will be between two numbers because it's moved halfway to the next hour.

Half Past — minute hand always on 6 12 3 6 9 4 3:30 Half past 3 12 3 6 9 10 9:30 Half past 9 How to read half past: 1. Minute hand on 6 2. Hour hand is BETWEEN two numbers 3. Read the SMALLER number it just passed That's your hour!

Step 5: Quarter Past and Quarter To

The clock face can be split into four quarters, just like cutting a pizza into 4 slices:

Quarter past = the minute hand points to 3 (15 minutes past the hour).

Quarter to = the minute hand points to 9 (15 minutes before the next hour).

Quarter Past and Quarter To 12 3 6 9 1 2 2:15 Quarter past 2 12 3 6 9 4 5 4:45 Quarter to 5

Step 6: The Tricky Part — Where is the Hour Hand Really?

Here's something that confuses a lot of people: the hour hand doesn't stay on a number the whole hour. It slowly creeps toward the next number as the minutes tick by.

Look at this example: at 4:55, the minute hand is almost at 12 (just one tick away), and the short hour hand is very close to the 5. But the time is still 4 o'clock something — not 5! Why? Because the hour hand hasn't reached 5 yet. It's still in "4 territory."

The Tricky Part: 4:55 — Hour Hand Almost at 5! 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 4 zone Almost at 5... but NOT there yet! 4:55 Minute hand near 11 55 minutes have passed. Almost back to 12 (= almost a new hour) Hour hand NEAR 5 — but still 4! It hasn't crossed the 5 yet. So the hour is still 4. The Rule: Always read the number the hour hand has PASSED — not the one it's going toward!

Think of it like a race: the hour hand is running from 4 toward 5. At 4:55 it's almost at the finish line (5), but it hasn't crossed it yet — so we still say "4 something." Only when the minute hand hits 12 and a brand new hour starts does the hour hand officially land on 5, and we say "5 o'clock."

Quick trick: When the hour hand is between two numbers, always pick the smaller number it just passed. Between 4 and 5? The hour is 4. Between 11 and 12? The hour is 11!

Step 7: Quick Summary

Minute on 12 🕐 O'Clock :00 — on the hour e.g. 3:00, 8:00 Minute on 3 🕐 Quarter Past :15 — 15 minutes in e.g. 2:15, 10:15 Minute on 6 🕧 Half Past :30 — halfway round e.g. 3:30, 9:30 Minute on 9 🕐 Quarter To :45 — 15 mins left e.g. 4:45, 11:45

Test Your Clock Skills!

Let's see how well you can read clocks! Answer each question below.

Days and Months

Days of the Week: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday — that's 7 days in a week! School days are Monday to Friday. Weekend is Saturday and Sunday.

Months of the Year: January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December — that's 12 months, just like the 12 numbers on a clock!

Times of Day

Morning is when the sun rises and you wake up. Afternoon comes after lunchtime. Evening is when it starts to get darker. Night is when the stars come out and you sleep. We do different activities at different times of day!

Practice at home: Find an analog clock in your house. Ask a grown-up what time it is, then try to read it yourself! Start with o'clock times, then try half past. You'll be a clock expert in no time!

Comparing Objects

We can compare two or more objects by their measurements. We use special words to describe differences.

Comparing Length: "Longer" means more length. "Shorter" means less length. "Taller" means the height is greater. Example: A giraffe is taller than a person. A pencil is shorter than a yardstick.

Comparing Weight: "Heavier" means it weighs more. "Lighter" means it weighs less. Example: A book is heavier than a feather. A feather is lighter than a pencil.

Comparing More and Less: "More" means a greater amount. "Less" means a smaller amount. Example: 10 apples is more than 5 apples. 3 toys is less than 8 toys.

Comparing Capacity (How Much Fits): "Full" means all the way to the top. "Half full" means filled to the middle. "Empty" means nothing is in it. A full cup holds more liquid than a half-full cup!

Ordering Three Objects: Put three things in order from shortest to tallest, or lightest to heaviest. Example: pencil (shortest), crayon (middle), stick (tallest).

Comparing Length Short Medium Long The long bar is longer than the short bar. The short bar is shorter than the medium bar.
Comparing Capacity (How Much Fits?) Full Half Full Empty Full cup holds MORE than empty cup
Compare It: Pick three pencils (or crayons) of different lengths. Order them from shortest to longest!

Measurement Fun Activities!

Activity 1: Measurement Scavenger Hunt. Find 5 things that are about 6 inches long. Find 3 things that are very heavy. Find 2 things that are empty. Can you find them?

Activity 2: Measure Your Room. Use a ruler or a measuring tape. Measure the width of your bedroom door. How many inches? Measure your bed. How many of your hand spans does your bed equal?

Activity 3: Body Measurement. Your body is a ruler! Measure things using hand spans (how wide your hand is spread out). Measure things using foot lengths. How many hand spans is your desk? How many foot lengths is your room?

Activity 4: Time Diary. What time do you wake up? When do you eat breakfast? When do you go to school or play? When do you eat lunch? Keep track of the times you do things during the day!

Activity 5: Height Chart. Stand against a wall. Have an adult mark how tall you are. Do this every few months. Are you growing taller? Keep track and see!

Big Challenge: Measure 5 different objects in your house using a ruler. Write down how many inches each one is. Which is the longest?

Quiz Time!

Multiply & Divide

Groups, sharing, and arrays!

Making Groups

Multiplication means making equal groups of things. Let's see how it works!

What is a Group? A group is a bunch of the same things put together. When we have 2 groups of 3 apples, that means we have 6 apples altogether!

2 groups of 3 = 6 A B C Group 1 D E F Group 2
Example: You have 3 bags with 2 apples in each. That's 3 groups of 2 = 6 apples total!

Sharing Equally

Division means sharing things equally. When you divide, everyone gets the same amount!

How to Share: If you have 12 cookies and want to share them equally with 3 friends, each friend gets 4 cookies. 12 ÷ 3 = 4!

12 cookies shared among 3 friends = 4 each ↓ Divide equally ↓ 4 4 4
Fair Sharing: When you divide fairly, everyone has the same amount. No one gets more or less!

Arrays

An array is a way to arrange objects in rows and columns. It helps us see multiplication!

3 rows × 4 columns = 12 Row 1 Row 2 Row 3

How to Count an Array: Count the rows (3) and columns (4). Then multiply: 3 × 4 = 12!

Arrays everywhere: You see arrays when you look at eggs in a carton, or chairs in a classroom!

Practice: Groups and Sharing

Exercise 1: If you have 2 bags with 5 pencils in each, how many pencils do you have altogether?

Exercise 2: Share 9 stickers equally among 3 friends. How many does each friend get?

Exercise 3: Make an array with 2 rows and 3 columns using dots. How many dots are there?

Tip: Draw pictures to help you solve! You can use dots, circles, or anything you like.

Fun Challenges!

Challenge 1: How many legs do 2 cats have? (Remember: 1 cat = 4 legs)

Challenge 2: You have 15 marbles to share with 5 friends. How many does each friend get?

Challenge 3: Make arrays with household items: buttons, coins, pasta shapes, or rocks!

Did you know? Arrays help us build buildings, gardens, and even patterns!

Quiz Time!

Fractions

Halves and quarters!

Halves

A half means dividing something into 2 equal parts. Each part is called "one half" or "1/2".

A Half = 2 Equal Parts 1/2 1/2 Pizza cut in half 1/2 1/2 Apple cut in half
Did You Know? If you have 10 cookies and eat half, you eat 5 cookies!

Quarters

A quarter means dividing something into 4 equal parts. Each part is called "one quarter" or "1/4".

A Quarter = 4 Equal Parts 1/4 1/4 1/4 1/4
Example: If a pizza has 4 slices and you eat 1 slice, you ate 1/4 of the pizza!

Equal Parts

For fractions to work, the parts must be EQUAL - the same size!

Equal vs Unequal Parts Equal Equal ✓ These are halves! Bigger Smaller ✗ These are NOT equal!
Remember: All parts must be the same size to make a true fraction!

Practice Fractions

Exercise 1: Draw a circle and divide it in half. Color one half.

Exercise 2: Draw a rectangle and divide it into 4 equal parts (quarters). Color one quarter.

Exercise 3: Take a piece of paper and fold it in half. Now fold it again. How many parts do you have?

Tip: You can use food too! Cut an apple in half, or divide a sandwich into quarters!

Fraction Fun!

Challenge 1: Find things at home you can divide: string, paper, chocolate bars. Can you divide them into equal parts?

Challenge 2: Draw your favorite shape (star, heart, hexagon) and divide it into halves or quarters.

Challenge 3: Make a fraction snack! Share a cookie or cracker with friends and talk about the pieces!

Quiz Time!

Position & Direction

Left, right, up, down, and turns!

Where Things Are

We use special words to describe where things are. These help us find things and give directions!

Position Words above next to below inside
  • Above: Higher up, over something
  • Below: Lower down, under something
  • Next to: Beside something, to the side
  • Inside: Within something
  • Outside: Not within something
Try it: Look around your room and name things that are above, below, and next to you!

Turns and Rotations

A turn means rotating or spinning. We can turn in different amounts: quarter turn, half turn, three-quarter turn, and full turn!

Types of Turns 1/4 turn = 90° 1/2 turn = 180° 3/4 turn = 270° Full = 360°
Try it: Stand up and make quarter turns, half turns. Can you spot objects after you turn?

Left and Right

Left and right help us know which way to go. Everyone has a left hand and a right hand!

Left and Right Hands LEFT RIGHT
Did You Know? If someone faces you, their right is on YOUR left! This is tricky!

Practice Position & Direction

Exercise 1: Give someone directions using above, below, left, right, and next to.

Exercise 2: Make quarter turns and say which direction you're facing (north, south, east, west).

Exercise 3: Draw a map of your bedroom using position words to describe where things are.

Tip: Practice with toys or objects to make it fun!

Direction Games!

Simon Says Turns: Play Simon Says with turns: "Simon says make a quarter turn left!"

Follow the Instructions: Give someone instructions to find a hidden object using position words.

Dance and Turn: Dance and practice making different amounts of turns!

Quiz Time!

Money

Coins and counting money!

US Coins

We use coins to pay for things! Let's learn about the different coins and how much they're worth.

US Coins Penny 1 cent Nickel 5 cents 10¢ Dime 10 cents 25¢ Quarter 25 cents
Remember: 1 quarter = 5 nickels = 10 dimes = 25 pennies!

Counting Coins

To count coins, start with the biggest coins and work your way to the smallest ones.

Counting: 1 Quarter + 2 Dimes + 3 Pennies 25¢ = 25¢ 10¢ 10¢ + 20¢ + 3¢ Total = 48¢
Tip: Always count the biggest coins first - quarters, then dimes, then nickels, then pennies!

Making Amounts of Money

We can use different coins to make the same amount of money. For example, 10 pennies = 1 dime = 2 nickels!

Different Ways to Make 25¢ Way 1: 25¢ Way 2: Way 3: 10¢ 10¢ Way 4: (and 6 more!)
Fun Fact: There are many ways to make the same amount of money!

Practice with Money

Exercise 1: Count this pile of coins: 3 quarters, 2 dimes, 1 nickel. How much is it?

Exercise 2: If you have 50 cents, show different ways to make that amount.

Exercise 3: You have 30 cents. If candy costs 25 cents, how much money will you have left?

Tip: Use real coins to practice! It makes learning about money fun and real!

Money Games!

Coin Store: Set up a pretend store and use real or fake coins to "buy" and "sell" things.

Coin Sorting: Collect real coins and sort them by type and value.

Money Jar: Save coins in a jar and count them to see how much you have!

Quiz Time!

Plants

Roots, stems, leaves, and flowers!

Plant Parts

Every plant has special parts that help it grow and stay alive. Let's learn what each part does!

Flower Leaves Stem Roots underground
  • Roots - Grow under the ground and drink water like a straw
  • Stem - Holds the plant up tall and carries water to the leaves
  • Leaves - Make food for the plant using sunlight
  • Flower - Grows pretty colors and makes seeds
Did You Know? Plants are like people - roots are like a mouth that drinks water!

How Plants Grow - The Life Cycle

Plants go through amazing changes as they grow! Watch the journey from tiny seed to beautiful flower:

1. Seed 2. Sprout 3. Seedling 4. Plant 5. Flower 6. Seeds! The cycle starts again!

The plant starts as a tiny seed, sprouts roots and a little green shoot, grows into a seedling with leaves, becomes a full plant, flowers beautifully, and then makes new seeds!

Did You Know? A sunflower can grow taller than a person - sometimes reaching 8 feet high!

What Plants Need to Grow

Plants need four important things to stay healthy and grow big and strong:

☀️ Sunlight

Plants need sunlight to make their own food. Light makes the leaves green!

💧 Water

Water travels up through the roots. Plants drink water just like we do!

🌍 Soil

Soil feeds the plant with nutrients. Roots grow into soil to find food and water.

💨 Air

Plants breathe! They take in air through tiny holes in their leaves called stomata.

Did You Know? Plants make their own food using sunlight, water, and air. This amazing process is called photosynthesis!

Different Types of Plants

Plants come in many different shapes, sizes, and types. Here are some you might see every day:

  • 🌳 Trees - Big woody plants with branches. They can live for many years!
  • 🌻 Flowers - Colorful and pretty plants that attract bees. They smell wonderful!
  • 🥕 Vegetables - Plants we grow to eat, like carrots, tomatoes, and lettuce
  • 🌿 Grass - Small green plants that cover lawns and fields
  • 🌿 Herbs - Small plants we use for cooking, like basil and mint
  • 🌵 Cacti - Plants that live in the desert and store water inside
Did You Know? The world's tallest tree is a Redwood tree in California called Hyperion - it's over 380 feet tall!

Match the Plant Part to its Job!

How to play: Pick a plant part on the left, then pick the job it does on the right. A line will connect your choices — green means correct, red means try again! Match all 5 to win!

Grow Your Own Bean - A Fun Experiment!

Let's grow a bean plant! You can do this at home with your family.

1️⃣
Get Your Supplies: Find a small cup, soil, and a dried bean (like a kidney bean or black bean)
2️⃣
Fill With Soil: Put soil in your cup, leaving a little space at the top
3️⃣
Plant Your Bean: Push the bean about 1 inch deep into the soil
4️⃣
Water It: Sprinkle water so the soil is moist (but not soaking wet)
5️⃣
Place in Sunlight: Put your cup near a sunny window
6️⃣
Wait and Watch: In 5-10 days, you should see a sprout! Keep the soil moist and watch it grow!
Bean Growing Experiment Day 1 Plant seed Day 5 Sprout! Day 10 Leaves grow Day 20 Getting tall! Day 30+ Flower! Keep the soil moist and place in sunlight — watch your bean grow!

Plant Fun Activities

Try these fun things with plants:

  • 🌱 Go on a plant hunt - look for different plants outside and draw them
  • 💚 Grow a plant from a cutting - ask an adult to help you
  • 🥦 Eat plants - vegetables and fruits are plants we can eat!
  • 👃 Smell flowers - what do different flowers smell like?
  • 📚 Read books about plants and gardens
  • 🎨 Draw and color your favorite plant

Quiz Time!

Animals

Different animals and their homes!

Types of Animals

There are so many different animals in the world! Let's learn about the different groups:

Mammal dog, cat, bear fur & warm blood Bird robin, eagle feathers & wings Fish goldfish, shark scales & gills Reptile turtle, snake scales & cold blood Insect bee, ant 6 legs & antennae 5 main groups of animals

Animal Groups:

  • 🐶 Mammals - Have fur or hair, drink milk as babies (dogs, cats, bears, people)
  • 🐦 Birds - Have feathers and lay eggs (robins, penguins, eagles)
  • 🐠 Fish - Live in water and breathe with gills (goldfish, whales, sharks)
  • 🐢 Reptiles - Have scales and lay eggs (snakes, lizards, turtles)
  • 🐝 Insects - Have six legs (ants, bees, butterflies)
Did You Know? There are over 1 million different animal species on Earth!

Animal Habitats and Homes

Different animals live in different places called habitats. Each habitat gives animals the things they need to survive:

🌳 Forest

Squirrels, deer, bears, and many birds live in forests with lots of trees

🌊 Ocean

Fish, whales, dolphins, and sea turtles live in the salty ocean water

🏜️ Desert

Camels, snakes, and scorpions live in hot, dry places with little water

❄️ Arctic

Polar bears, penguins, and seals live where it's icy and very cold

Animals also build special homes:

  • 🏠 Dogs live in houses with people
  • 🪶 Birds build nests in trees
  • 🕳️ Rabbits dig burrows underground
  • 🐻 Bears find caves to sleep in
  • 🦫 Beavers build dams with sticks
Did You Know? Beavers are amazing builders! They use sticks and mud to build dams across rivers!

What Animals Eat - Food Chains

Different animals eat different kinds of food. We can group them by what they eat:

🌿 Herbivores

Eat only plants: grass, leaves, seeds, and fruits

Examples: Cows, rabbits, elephants, giraffes, horses

🍖 Carnivores

Eat only meat from other animals

Examples: Lions, eagles, snakes, penguins

🍕 Omnivores

Eat both plants AND meat

Examples: Humans, bears, pigs, chickens

Did You Know? Elephants eat about 300 pounds of food every single day - that's like eating 1,200 apples!

Baby Animals and Growth

Baby animals grow up in different ways. Some animals lay eggs, and some have live babies:

Animals that Lay Eggs:

  • 🐛 Caterpillar → 🐛 → 🦋 Butterfly (amazing transformation!)
  • 🐣 Chick → 🐔 Chicken
  • 🐢 Turtle egg → 🐢 Turtle
  • 🐦 Egg → 🐦 Bird

Animals with Live Babies:

  • 🐕 Puppy → 🐕 Dog
  • 🐱 Kitten → 🐱 Cat
  • 👶 Human baby → 👨 Adult
  • 🐫 Baby camel → 🐫 Camel
The Butterfly Life Cycle 1. Egg 2. Caterpillar 3. Chrysalis 4. Butterfly! Lays eggs and the cycle starts again! Other baby animals: 🐕 Puppy → Dog • 🐱 Kitten → Cat • 🐣 Chick → Chicken • 🐸 Tadpole → Frog Some hatch from eggs, some are born live — all grow up!
Did You Know? Baby kangaroos are called joeys and they stay in their mother's pouch for protection!

Match the Animal to its Home!

How to play: Pick an animal on the left, then pick where it lives on the right. A line will connect your choices — green means correct, red means try again! Match all 5 to win!

Sort: Herbivore or Carnivore?

Look at each animal and decide - does it eat plants (herbivore) or meat (carnivore)? Click and drag to sort!

Fun Animal Activities

Try these fun things with animals:

  • 🐾 Act like different animals - crawl like a bear, hop like a rabbit, slither like a snake, fly like a bird!
  • 🔍 Go on an animal hunt - look for insects, birds, and other animals outside
  • 📚 Read books about animals and their habitats
  • 🎨 Draw and color your favorite animal
  • 🎵 Learn animal sounds - what sound does a cow make? What about a cat?
  • 🦁 Visit a zoo or aquarium to see real animals

Quiz Time!

Materials

Wood, plastic, metal, and more!

Types of Materials

Everything around us is made of different materials. Let's explore what things are made of:

Wood (from trees) Metal (hard, shiny) Plastic (man-made) Cloth (soft, bendy) Glass (clear, hard)
  • 🌳 Wood - Comes from trees, used for furniture and houses
  • 🪨 Metal - Hard, shiny, and strong, used for tools and utensils
  • 🧿 Plastic - Man-made material, used for toys and containers
  • 🪡 Fabric/Cloth - Soft and bendy, used for clothes and blankets
  • 🥛 Glass - Clear and hard, used for windows and drinking glasses
  • 🏺 Ceramic - Made from clay, used for plates and bowls
  • 📃 Paper - Thin and bendy, used for books and writing

Properties of Materials

Materials have different properties - these are the characteristics that make them special. Here are some important ones:

💪 Hard vs Soft

Hard: Rock, metal, wood

Soft: Cloth, cotton, sponge

🔍 Transparent vs Opaque

Transparent: Glass, clear plastic (you can see through)

Opaque: Wood, metal, brick (you can't see through)

🤸 Flexible vs Rigid

Flexible: Cloth, rubber, plastic bag (bends easily)

Rigid: Wood, metal, ceramic (doesn't bend)

💧 Waterproof vs Absorbent

Waterproof: Plastic, rubber, metal (water doesn't soak in)

Absorbent: Paper, cloth, sponge (soaks up water)

Natural vs Man-Made Materials

Some materials come from nature, while others are made by people:

🌍 Natural Materials

Come from nature and grown in the Earth

  • Wood (from trees)
  • Cotton (from plants)
  • Wool (from sheep)
  • Stone (from earth)
  • Clay (from earth)

🏭 Man-Made Materials

Made by people in factories

  • Plastic (made from oil)
  • Metal (melted and shaped)
  • Glass (made from sand)
  • Paper (made from wood)
  • Rubber (natural or synthetic)
Try sorting objects around you: Hard vs Soft. Heavy vs Light. Natural vs Man-Made.

Why We Choose Different Materials

We use different materials for different jobs because each material has special properties that make it perfect for that job:

  • 🍳 Metal for cooking pans - Metal conducts heat well and is very strong
  • 🪑 Wood for chairs - Wood is strong enough to hold us but not too heavy
  • 🥛 Glass for drinking glasses - Glass is clear so we can see our drink, and it doesn't stain
  • 🎮 Plastic for toys - Plastic is light, colorful, and safe for children
  • ☂️ Rubber for raincoat - Rubber is waterproof and flexible
  • 📖 Paper for books - Paper is light and can hold writing or pictures
  • 🪟 Glass for windows - Glass is transparent so light comes through
  • 👕 Cloth for clothes - Cloth is soft, flexible, and comfortable to wear

Match the Material to the Object!

How to play: Pick a material on the left, then pick what it's made into on the right. A line will connect your choices — green means correct, red means try again! Match all 5 to win!

Sort: Natural or Man-Made?

Look at each material and decide - is it from nature or made by people? Click and drag to sort!

Material Fun Activities

Touch and explore different materials:

  • 📋 Make a touch chart - collect different materials and glue them to paper. Feel each one!
  • 🔍 Go on a material hunt - find something made of wood, plastic, metal, cloth, and glass
  • 🤔 Ask questions - Why is a spoon made of metal? Why are socks made of cloth?
  • ♻️ Learn about recycling - plastic, paper, and glass can be recycled!
  • 🎨 Sort objects by material - make groups of things made from the same material
Did You Know? We can recycle paper, plastic, glass, and metal to help protect the Earth!

Quiz Time!

Senses

See, hear, touch, taste, and smell!

Sight - Seeing with Eyes

Our eyes are amazing! They help us see the beautiful world around us. Here's how sight works:

How Our Eyes See Our amazing eye! Colors Shapes Light & Dark Movement Eyes help us see colors, shapes, light, and things that move!

What We See:

  • 👁️ Colors - Red, blue, yellow, green, and many more!
  • 📏 Shapes and Sizes - Big and small, round and square
  • 📍 Distance - Things near us and things far away
  • 💡 Light and Dark - Bright and dim
  • 🎬 Movement - Things that move and things that stay still
Did You Know? Eagles can see 8 times better than humans! They can spot a rabbit from very far away.

Hearing - Listening with Ears

Our ears help us hear all kinds of sounds! Sound travels through the air in invisible waves:

How Our Ears Hear Sound waves enter ear Loud Sounds Quiet Sounds Musical Sounds High & Low High pitch Low pitch Ears catch sound waves and send messages to our brain!

Types of Sounds We Hear:

  • 🔔 Loud Sounds - Bell, drum, thunder
  • 🤫 Quiet Sounds - Whisper, soft music, leaves rustling
  • 🎵 High Sounds - Bird singing, whistle, high notes
  • 🎸 Low Sounds - Drum, thunder, deep voice
  • 🎶 Musical Sounds - Piano, guitar, singing
Did You Know? Bats use sound to "see" in the dark! They make high sounds and listen to the echoes - it's like seeing with sound!

Touch - Feeling with Skin

Our skin is our largest sense organ! Every part of our body can feel things:

What We Feel with Touch Super sensitive fingertips! Hard vs Soft Rock Pillow Smooth vs Rough Glass Sandpaper Hot vs Cold Hot Cold Wet vs Dry Water Sand Our skin feels hard, soft, hot, cold, smooth, and rough!

Different Things We Feel:

  • 💪 Hard vs Soft - Rock is hard, pillow is soft
  • Smooth vs Rough - Glass is smooth, sandpaper is rough
  • 🥶 Hot vs Cold - Ice cream is cold, sun is hot
  • ⚖️ Heavy vs Light - Book is heavy, feather is light
  • 💦 Wet vs Dry - Water is wet, sand is dry
Did You Know? Our fingertips are super sensitive! We can feel tiny bumps that are smaller than a grain of sand!

Taste - Tasting with Tongue

Our tongue has special taste buds that help us taste different flavors. We can taste five main types of tastes:

The Five Tastes on Our Tongue Sweet (tip) Salty (sides) Salty (sides) Sour (sides) Sour (sides) Bitter (back) Sweet 🍯 Sour 🍋 Salty 🧂 Bitter 🥦

The Five Tastes:

  • 🍯 Sweet - Sugar, honey, candy, fruit
  • 🧂 Salty - Salt, pretzels, chips
  • 🍋 Sour - Lemon, yogurt, pickles
  • 🥦 Bitter - Broccoli, dark chocolate, some vegetables
  • 🍲 Umami - Tomatoes, cheese, mushrooms (savory flavor)
Did You Know? We have about 10,000 taste buds on our tongue that help us taste all these flavors!

Smell - Smelling with Nose

Our nose is amazing! It can smell thousands of different scents. Smell helps us enjoy food, find things, and stay safe:

How Our Nose Smells Tiny particles enter our nose! Pleasant Smells Food Smells Fresh Smells Warning Smells! ! Smell keeps us safe! Our nose catches tiny scent particles floating in the air!

Types of Smells:

  • 🌸 Pleasant Smells - Flowers, cookies baking, fruit, perfume
  • 🍕 Food Smells - Pizza, popcorn, chocolate, bread
  • 😊 Fresh Smells - Grass, pine trees, clean laundry, rain
  • 😖 Unpleasant Smells - Garbage, bad milk, skunk

How Smell Works:

  • Tiny particles float in the air from things we smell
  • These particles go into our nose when we breathe
  • Special cells in our nose send messages to our brain
  • Our brain tells us what smell it is!
Did You Know? Dogs can smell about 10,000 times better than humans! Their sense of smell is incredibly powerful!

Match the Sense to the Body Part!

How to play: Pick a sense on the left, then pick the body part on the right. A line will connect your choices — green means correct, red means try again! Match all 5 to win!

Sense Fun Activities

Try these fun activities to explore your senses:

  • 👀 Sight Hunt - Look around and find something red, blue, round, and smooth
  • 👂 Sound Safari - Close your eyes and listen. How many different sounds can you hear?
  • Touch Exploration - Find something soft, hard, rough, and smooth
  • 👅 Taste Test - Try different foods and describe the tastes (ask a grown-up first!)
  • 👃 Smell Walk - Go for a walk and notice all the different smells
  • 🎯 Sense Combinations - Notice how smell and taste work together when you eat

Quiz Time!

Seasonal Changes

Spring, summer, autumn, and winter—the four seasons!

Spring: New Growth!

Spring is the season when nature wakes up after winter. The weather gets warmer, days get longer, and everything starts to grow again. Baby animals are born, and plants begin to bloom with beautiful flowers and leaves!

Spring: New Life and Growth!

Signs of Spring:

  • 🌸 Flowers Bloom - Colorful flowers open up everywhere
  • 🍃 New Leaves - Trees grow fresh green leaves
  • 🐣 Baby Animals - Birds lay eggs, and baby animals are born
  • ☀️ Warmer Weather - Days get warmer and sunny
  • 📅 Longer Days - We have more daylight hours
Fun Spring Activity: Go outside and find 3 signs of spring. Draw pictures of what you see!

Summer: The Hottest Season!

Summer is the warmest season of the year! It has the longest days, which means lots of sunshine and fun outdoor activities. Plants grow big and full, and gardens are filled with fruit and vegetables.

Summer: Sunshine and Growth!

Summer Features:

  • ☀️ Hot Weather - The warmest time of year
  • 🌞 Longest Days - Most hours of daylight
  • 🌳 Full Bloom - Trees are thick with green leaves
  • 🍎 Fruit & Vegetables - Plants produce lots of food
  • 🎉 Outdoor Fun - Perfect for swimming, picnics, and play
Summer Fun: Keep track of how the sun sets later each evening compared to spring!

Autumn: Leaves Change Color!

Autumn (also called fall) is when leaves on trees change color and fall to the ground. The weather gets cooler, days get shorter, and farmers harvest their crops. It's a season of change and preparation for winter.

Autumn: Colors Change!

Autumn Signs:

  • 🍂 Leaves Change - Green leaves turn red, orange, and yellow
  • 🍁 Leaves Fall - Leaves drop from trees to the ground
  • 🧥 Cooler Weather - We need sweaters and jackets
  • 🚜 Harvest Time - Farmers pick crops like pumpkins and apples
  • 📅 Shorter Days - Days get shorter, nights get longer
Autumn Activity: Collect fallen leaves of different colors and make a pattern or picture!

Winter: The Coldest Season

Winter is the coldest season. Days are short and nights are long. In many places, it snows and the ground freezes. Some trees lose all their leaves, and animals prepare for the cold by finding shelter or migrating to warmer places.

Winter: Cold and Snow!

Winter Characteristics:

  • ❄️ Very Cold - The coldest time of year
  • 🌨️ Snow - In many places, it snows and covers the ground
  • Frost - Ice crystals form on plants and the ground
  • 📅 Shortest Days - Fewest hours of daylight
  • 🌳 Bare Trees - Many trees have no leaves
  • 😴 Animals Rest - Some animals hibernate or sleep
Winter Observation: Look outside and count how many trees still have leaves. Most will be bare!

Types of Weather

Weather changes throughout the seasons. We can experience sunshine, rain, wind, snow, and fog. Learning about different types of weather helps us prepare and stay safe!

Types of Weather Sunny Rainy Snowy Windy Foggy Cloudy Rainbow

Weather Types:

  • ☀️ Sunny - Bright sunshine, warm, clear sky
  • 🌧️ Rainy - Water falling from clouds as rain
  • ❄️ Snowy - Snow falls and covers the ground
  • 💨 Windy - Strong wind blows leaves and moves clouds
  • 🌫️ Foggy - Thick mist makes it hard to see
  • ☁️ Cloudy - Clouds cover the sky
  • 🌈 Rainbow - Colors in the sky after rain and sun
Weather Tracking: Keep a weather diary for one week. Draw pictures of the weather each day!

Daylight Changes Through the Year

As Earth moves around the sun, the number of daylight hours changes. Summer has the longest days, winter has the shortest days, and spring and autumn are in between. This is why we wake up and go to bed at different times throughout the year!

Daylight Hours Through the Year Winter8 hrs Spring12 hrs Summer16 hrs Autumn12 hrs

Daylight Facts:

  • ☀️ Summer Days - 14-16 hours of daylight, very bright mornings and late sunsets
  • 🌅 Spring & Autumn - About 12 hours of daylight, equal day and night
  • 🌙 Winter Days - Only 8-10 hours of daylight, dark mornings and early sunsets
  • 📅 Day Length Changes - Every day gets slightly longer or shorter
  • 🌍 Why It Happens - Earth is tilted, and as it orbits the sun, different parts get more or less sun
Daylight Experiment: Notice what time the sun rises and sets this week. Next week, check again—has it changed?

Seasonal Activities and Fun!

Each season brings different activities and fun things to enjoy. What's your favorite seasonal activity?

Spring Fun:

  • 🌻 Plant seeds in a garden or pot
  • 🦋 Look for butterflies and insects
  • 🌧️ Jump in puddles

Summer Fun:

  • 🏊 Go swimming
  • 🧊 Make ice cream or popsicles
  • ⛱️ Have picnics at the park

Autumn Fun:

  • 🍂 Collect colorful leaves
  • 🎃 Carve pumpkins
  • 🍎 Pick apples from trees

Winter Fun:

  • ⛄ Build snowmen and snow forts
  • 🛷 Go sledding
  • 🎄 Celebrate winter holidays
Your Turn: Draw your favorite seasonal activity. Show what you enjoy doing most!

Quiz Time!

Alphabet & Phonics

Letters and their sounds!

The Alphabet — 26 Letters!

The alphabet is the set of 26 letters we use to write every word in English. Each letter has a capital (big) form and a lowercase (small) form. Let's see them all!

The 26 Letters of the Alphabet A a B b C c D d E e F f G g H h I i J j K k L l M m N n O o P p Q q R r S s T t U u V v W w X x Y y Z z Vowels (the special 5!) A E I O U Consonants (the other 21) B C D F G H J K L M N P Q R S T V W X Y Z Every word in English uses at least one vowel! Sing the ABC song to remember: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z!

There are 5 vowels (A, E, I, O, U) and 21 consonants. Vowels are super important — every word needs at least one! Think of vowels as the "glue" that holds words together.

Activity: Write the alphabet on paper. Circle all 5 vowels in red. Can you sing the whole ABC song?

Letter Sounds (Phonics)

Every letter makes its own special sound. When we learn these sounds, we can read any word! This is called phonics.

Letter Sounds — Say Each One Out Loud! A = /a/ apple, ant, ask B = /b/ ball, bat, bed C = /k/ cat, cup, car D = /d/ dog, dad, dig E = /e/ egg, end, elf F = /f/ fish, fun, fox G = /g/ go, got, gum H = /h/ hat, hen, hop I = /i/ igloo, in, it J = /j/ jam, jug, jump K = /k/ kite, king, kit L = /l/ lip, leg, log M = /m/ map, mop, mug N = /n/ net, nap, nut O = /o/ on, ox, octopus P = /p/ pig, pan, pot Q = /kw/ queen, quiz R = /r/ run, rat, red S = /s/ sun, sit, six T = /t/ top, ten, tip U = /u/ up, under, us V = /v/ van, vet, vine W = /w/ wet, win, wig X = /ks/ fox, box, six Y = /y/ yes, yak, yell Z = /z/ zip, zoo, zero Tip: Say each sound, not the letter name! "B" says /b/ (like a puff), not "bee." "M" says /mmm/, not "em."
Practice: Point to each letter and say its sound (not its name). /a/, /b/, /k/, /d/... Can you get through all 26?

Blending Sounds Into Words

Now the fun part! When you know each letter's sound, you can blend them together to read a word. Say each sound slowly, then say them faster and faster until they become a word.

Blending: Slide the Sounds Together! /c/ + /a/ + /t/ = CAT /d/ + /o/ + /g/ = DOG Try These! /s/ + /u/ + /n/ = SUN /p/ + /i/ + /g/ = PIG /h/ + /o/ + /t/ = HOT /r/ + /e/ + /d/ = RED /b/ + /u/ + /s/ = BUS /m/ + /a/ + /p/ = MAP /f/ + /i/ + /n/ = FIN

How to blend: Say each sound separately first: /c/... /a/... /t/. Now say them a bit faster: /ca/... /t/. Even faster: "cat!" You did it!

Parent Tip: Use your finger to slide under each letter as your child says the sound. This helps them connect the letters they see with the sounds they hear.

Word Families & Sight Words

Word families are groups of words that rhyme and share the same ending. Once you know one, you can read them all!

Word Families — Change the First Letter! The -AT Family cat bat hat mat The -IG Family pig big dig wig The -OT Family hot pot dot lot The -UN Family sun run fun bun Sight Words — Learn These by Heart! (You can't sound them out easily) the I a is it in and to we he she my you was are said have they of do what for go no so like see come

Sight words are common words that show up again and again in books. Some of them don't follow the normal phonics rules, so we learn to recognize them on sight — just by looking at them. The more sight words you know, the faster you can read!

Activity: Write each sight word on a small card. Practice reading them every day. How many can you read in one minute?

Phonics Fun & Rhyming

Rhyming words sound the same at the end. If you can read "cat," you can read anything that rhymes with it — bat, hat, mat, sat, rat, fat! Rhyming is like a superpower for reading.

Rhyme Time! Words that Sound the Same -at rhymes cat bat hat mat sat rat -og rhymes dog fog hog jog log bog -an rhymes can fan man pan ran van -op rhymes hop mop top pop stop -in rhymes pin fin win bin tin thin -ug rhymes bug hug mug rug dug tug

Activity 1: Rhyme Chain. Say "cat." Now think of a word that rhymes. "Bat!" Keep going — hat, mat, sat... How many can you get?

Activity 2: Odd One Out. Which word doesn't rhyme? "cat, hat, dog, bat." Dog doesn't rhyme! It doesn't end in -at.

Activity 3: Beginning Sound Sort. Sort these words by their first sound: sun, big, sit, ball, six, bat. S-words: sun, sit, six. B-words: big, ball, bat!

Challenge: Can you think of 5 words that rhyme with "fun"?

Quiz Time!

Reading Basics

Words, sentences, and stories!

Reading Words

When you see a word you don't know, use your phonics skills! Look at each letter, say its sound, then blend the sounds together. Let's practice with CVC words (Consonant-Vowel-Consonant):

Sound It Out — CVC Words Short A /c/ /a/ /t/ = cat /m/ /a/ /n/ = man /v/ /a/ /n/ = van Short E /b/ /e/ /d/ = bed /r/ /e/ /d/ = red /p/ /e/ /n/ = pen Short I /s/ /i/ /t/ = sit /b/ /i/ /g/ = big /p/ /i/ /n/ = pin Short O & U /h/ /o/ /t/ = hot /c/ /u/ /p/ = cup /b/ /u/ /s/ = bus 3 Steps to Read Any Word: 1. Look at each letter 2. Say each sound slowly: /c/... /a/... /t/ 3. Blend them together faster and faster: "cat!"
Tip: If you get stuck on a word, cover the last letters and just say the first sound. Then uncover one letter at a time!

Reading Sentences

A sentence is a group of words that tells a complete thought. Every sentence follows rules:

Parts of a Sentence T he cat sat on the mat . Capital letter at the start! Period (.) at the end! Finger spaces between words Practice reading these sentences: 1. The dog is big. 2. I can see the sun. 3. We like to run and hop. 4. The hen sat on her egg. 5. My cat is in the box.

Every sentence has three things: it starts with a capital letter, has spaces between words, and ends with a period (.), question mark (?), or exclamation mark (!).

Activity: Read each sentence above. Point to the capital letter, then slide your finger under each word, then find the period at the end!

Reading Stories

Stories have three parts: a beginning (who and where), a middle (what happens), and an end (how it turns out). Let's read a story together!

The Lost Ball Beginning Tom has a red ball. He likes to play with it in the park. Middle One day, Tom kicks the ball too far. It goes into the bushes! Tom is sad. End His friend Mia helps him look. They find the ball under a big leaf. Tom is happy! He says "Thank you, Mia!" Think About It: 1. What color is Tom's ball? 2. Where did the ball go? 3. Who helped Tom find it? 4. How did Tom feel at the end?

After you read a story, always ask yourself: Who is in the story? What happened? How did it end? This helps you understand and remember what you read!

Try it: Can you retell "The Lost Ball" to someone in your own words? Use the three parts: beginning, middle, and end.

Reading Comprehension

Comprehension means understanding what you read. It's not enough to say the words — you need to know what they mean! Here are some strategies that good readers use:

5 Reading Strategies 👀 Look at Pictures Pictures give you clues! 🔤 Sound It Out Use your phonics skills! 🤔 Does It Make Sense? Re-read if it doesn't! Skip & Come Back Read ahead, then go back to guess Ask for Help It's okay to ask! Mini Passage — Read and Answer! The sun is up. Jen and her dog Max go to the park. Max runs fast. He digs in the mud. Jen says, "Oh no, Max!" Max is dirty but happy. Q: What did Max dig in? Q: Is Max sad or happy? Q: Where did Jen go?
Daily practice: Read for 10-15 minutes every day! Read books, cereal boxes, street signs, menus — anything with words. The more you read, the better you get!

Reading Fun Activities!

Activity 1: Story Retell. After reading a story, tell it back in your own words. Use three fingers: "First..." (thumb), "Then..." (pointer), "At the end..." (middle finger).

Activity 2: Word Hunt. Pick a word like "the" or "and." How many times can you find it on one page of a book? Count them!

Activity 3: Read to a Stuffed Animal. Pick your favorite stuffed toy and read a book to it. Point to each word as you read. Your toy loves story time!

Activity 4: Make Predictions. Before you turn the page, guess what might happen next. Were you right? This makes reading exciting!

Activity 5: Act It Out. After reading a story, act it out! Pretend to be the characters. What do they say? What do they do?

Reading Goal: Try to read one new book (or one new story) every week! Keep a list of all the books you read. You'll be amazed how many you finish!

Quiz Time!

Writing

Create your own words and stories!

Writing Letters — Handwriting Basics

Good handwriting starts with how you hold your pencil and form each letter. Let's learn the right way!

How to Hold Your Pencil & Sit Pencil Grip 1. Thumb and pointer finger pinch near the tip 2. Rest on your middle finger Good Posture Sit up straight Feet flat on the floor Paper slightly tilted Other hand holds paper Tip: Start with BIG letters, then get smaller! Letter Formation Most letters start at the TOP and go DOWN A b C d Big (Capital): A B C D Small (lowercase): a b c d Practice each letter 5 times!

Write capital letters (big) and lowercase letters (small). Some letters look the same big and small (like O/o and S/s), while others look very different (like A/a and G/g). Practice writing each letter of the alphabet — both capital and lowercase!

Activity: Grab paper and a pencil. Write the whole alphabet in capitals: A B C D... Then write it in lowercase: a b c d... Circle any letters you want to practice more!

Writing Words — Spelling It Out

When you want to write a word, stretch it out — say the word slowly and listen for each sound. Then write the letter for each sound you hear!

Stretch It Out — Listen for Each Sound! I want to write "frog" Say it slowly: fffff...rrr...ooo...ggg Write each sound: f r o g Words to Practice Writing cat dog sun pig hat cup bed map top leg fox jam Challenge Words: frog stop help hand Spelling Tips: Say the word slowly, listen for EVERY sound. Write a letter for each sound you hear. It's okay if the spelling isn't perfect!

Don't worry about spelling every word perfectly — the important thing is to try! Write the sounds you hear. Over time, you'll learn the correct spellings. This is called "invented spelling" and it's a great way for young writers to get started.

Activity: Pick 5 objects in your room. Say each name slowly. Write the word by listening to the sounds. Ask a grown-up to check!

Writing Sentences

A sentence is a group of words that makes a complete thought. To write a great sentence, remember these rules:

The 4 Rules of Writing a Sentence 1 Capital Letter Start with a BIG letter at the front 2 Finger Spaces Leave a gap between each word 3 Makes Sense Your sentence tells a complete thought 4 End Punctuation . ? or ! at the end Sentence Starters — Try Finishing These! I like ___. My favorite ___ is ___. The ___ is ___. I can see a ___. I went to ___. Today I feel ___. Example: "I like pizza." "My favorite color is blue." "The cat is fluffy."

Three types of sentences end with different marks: a telling sentence ends with a period (.). A question ends with a question mark (?). An exciting sentence ends with an exclamation mark (!).

Activity: Write 3 sentences about your day — one telling sentence (.), one question (?), and one exciting sentence (!). Check: does each one start with a capital letter?

Writing Stories — Be an Author!

You can write your very own stories! A story has three parts, just like reading: a beginning, a middle, and an end. Here's how to plan one:

Story Planning Map Beginning Who is in your story? Where does it happen? When does it happen? "One day, a little fox..." Middle What is the problem? What happens next? How do they feel? "Then he got lost..." End How is the problem solved? How does it end? "Finally he found..." Story Starters — Pick One and Write! 1. "A little robot woke up in a garden. He had never seen flowers before..." 2. "My dog found a magic bone in the backyard. When he chewed it..." 3. "It was raining inside the school! Puddles were everywhere and..."

Writing tip: Draw a picture first! Sketching what happens in your story helps you think about what to write. Then write a sentence or two for each part — beginning, middle, and end.

Challenge: Pick one story starter above. Draw 3 pictures (beginning, middle, end). Then write at least 3 sentences to tell your story!

Writing Fun — Creative Challenges!

Activity 1: Label Your Room. Write the names of 10 things in your room on sticky notes. Stick them on the objects! Bed, lamp, door, book, toy...

Activity 2: Write a Letter. Write a short letter to someone you love. Start with "Dear ___," write what you want to say, and end with "Love, ___." You can even mail it or hand-deliver it!

Activity 3: My Favorite Things List. Write a list of your favorite things — favorite food, favorite animal, favorite game, favorite color, favorite person. Can you write a sentence about why you like each one?

Activity 4: Comic Strip. Fold a paper into 3 boxes. Draw a simple comic with a beginning, middle, and end. Write what the characters say in speech bubbles!

Activity 5: Daily Journal. Every night, write one sentence about your day. "Today I played with my friend." Over time, you'll have a whole book about YOUR life!

Remember: The best way to become a good writer is to write every day! Even just one sentence. Every word you write makes you stronger.

Quiz Time!

Vocabulary

Learn new words every day!

Color Words & Describing Words

Colors are some of the first describing words (adjectives) you'll learn. Describing words tell us more about a person, place, or thing.

Color Words red orange yellow green blue purple pink brown black white More Describing Words (Adjectives) — They Tell Us More! Size: big, small, tiny, huge, tall, short, long Feel: soft, hard, rough, smooth, wet, dry, sticky Taste: sweet, sour, salty, yummy, yucky Feeling: happy, sad, scared, brave, tired, hungry, angry

Use describing words to make your sentences more interesting! Instead of "I see a dog," try "I see a big brown dog." Instead of "The ball is there," try "The small red ball is there."

Activity: Look around you. Pick 5 things and describe each with TWO describing words. "A soft white pillow." "A cold wet glass."

Naming Words (Nouns)

A noun is a word for a person, place, animal, or thing. Everything around you has a name — and that name is a noun!

Nouns — Words for People, Places, Animals & Things People mom, dad sister, brother teacher, friend baby, doctor grandma grandpa Who do you know? Animals dog, cat, bird fish, frog, bear lion, elephant rabbit, horse butterfly snake, turtle What animals do you like? Places school, home park, store library, zoo beach, farm kitchen bedroom Where do you go? Things ball, book, toy cup, bed, car apple, tree shoe, hat, bag crayon, pencil table, chair What things do you see?
Activity: Walk around your house for 2 minutes. Point to everything you see and say its name. "Door! Table! Window! Lamp!" All nouns!

Action Words (Verbs)

A verb is an action word — it tells us what someone or something does. Every sentence needs a verb! Without an action word, nothing happens.

Action Words — What Can You Do? Body Actions run walk jump hop sit stand spin skip climb crawl dance clap Try acting them out! Everyday Actions eat drink sleep wash read write draw play cook clean sing talk Which ones do you do daily? Sense & Mind Actions see hear smell taste feel touch think know like love want need You use these every moment! Verbs in Sentences — The Action Makes It Interesting! The dog runs fast. She reads a book. I eat an apple. We play in the park. He jumps high. The bird sings a song. Can you find the action word (verb) in each sentence?
Game: Play "Act It Out"! One person acts out an action word (no talking!) and the other person guesses. Jump! Sleep! Eat! Swim!

Opposites & Synonyms

Opposites (antonyms) are words with opposite meanings. Synonyms are words that mean the same thing. Learning both helps you pick the perfect word!

Opposites & Synonyms Opposites (Different Meanings) big small hot cold happy sad up down fast slow old new open close light dark wet dry Synonyms (Same Meaning) big = large small = tiny happy = glad sad = unhappy fast = quick pretty = beautiful funny = silly scared = afraid nice = kind
Game — Opposite Shout! A parent says a word, and you shout its opposite as fast as you can! Hot? "COLD!" Big? "SMALL!" Happy? "SAD!" How fast can you go?

Vocabulary Building Activities!

The more words you know, the better you can read, write, and talk! Here are fun ways to learn new words every day:

Activity 1: Word of the Day. Learn one new word each day. Say it, spell it, use it in a sentence, and draw a picture of it. By the end of the year, you'll know over 300 new words!

Activity 2: Category Sort. Pick a category like "food" and list as many words as you can: apple, pizza, milk, bread, rice, banana... Can you get to 10? 15? 20?

Activity 3: Context Clues. When you find a word you don't know in a book, look at the words around it for clues. If you read "The puppy was very tiny — it fit in my hand," you can guess "tiny" means very small!

Activity 4: Word Web. Write a word in the middle of a paper (like "dog"). Draw lines out and write related words: fur, bark, tail, paws, puppy, pet, walk, fetch. This builds connections between words!

Activity 5: Silly Sentences. Pick 3 random words and try to use all 3 in one sentence. "Purple," "jump," and "cake" — "The purple frog can jump over a cake!" The sillier, the better!

Challenge: Can you use 3 new words from today's lesson in a sentence? Try: "The tiny bird sings a beautiful song."

Quiz Time!

Spelling

Learn to spell words correctly!

CVC Words: Consonant-Vowel-Consonant

CVC words are simple three-letter words. They have a consonant at the beginning, a vowel in the middle, and a consonant at the end. These are some of the easiest words to read and spell!

CVC Words: The Building Blocks C Start Consonant V Middle Vowel C End Consonant Examples: cat, dog, pig, sun, run, sit, bed, get, can, fan

Common CVC Words:

cat, bat, mat
dog, log, fog
pig, dig, rig
sun, run, fun
sit, fit, bit
bed, red, wed

How to Spell CVC Words:

  1. Say the word slowly: /c/ /a/ /t/ = cat
  2. Write the first sound (consonant): c
  3. Write the middle sound (vowel): a
  4. Write the last sound (consonant): t
  5. Read it: cat! ✓
Practice: Try spelling these CVC words: pen, web, tin, hot, nut. Say each letter as you write!

Digraphs: Two Letters, One Sound

A digraph is when two letters make just one sound. For example, "sh" in "ship" makes the /sh/ sound. Learning digraphs helps you spell many more words!

Common Digraphs sh/sh/ship, fish ch/ch/chat, chin th/th/this, that ng/ng/ring, sing ck/k/back, duck wh/w/what, when

Important Digraphs:

  • sh = /sh/ sound (ship, fish, wish, shop)
  • ch = /ch/ sound (chat, chin, chip, chop)
  • th = /th/ sound (this, that, them, with)
  • ng = /ng/ sound (ring, sing, wing, long)
  • ck = /k/ sound (back, duck, kick, rock)
  • wh = /w/ sound (what, when, which, while)
Tip: When you see two consonants together, they might be a digraph. Remember: two letters, ONE sound!

Tricky Words: Learn by Heart

Some words don't follow the normal spelling rules. We call these sight words or tricky words. You need to learn them by heart because you can't sound them out!

Common Tricky Words the said was are you come some one they what

Top Tricky Words to Learn:

the - most common word
said - past of "say"
was - past of "is"
are - part of "to be"
you - pronoun
come - doesn't rhyme with "some"
some - s-o-m-e
one - sounds like "won"
they - sounds like "thay"
what - sounds like "wot"

How to Learn Tricky Words:

  1. Look at the word carefully
  2. Say it out loud
  3. Trace it in the air with your finger
  4. Write it down several times
  5. Use it in a sentence
Memory Aid: Create a "word wall" in your room with tricky words. Look at it every day!

Word Family Patterns

Words that rhyme often have the same ending pattern. Learning word families helps you spell many words! If you know "cat," you can spell "bat," "mat," "sat," and "fat"!

Word Family Houses at cat bat mat sat fat rat hat pat an can ban fan man pan ran tan van og dog fog log bog hog jog cog ig pig dig fig big wig jig rig un sun run fun bun gun nun ug hug bug mug rug tug dug jug

How Word Families Help:

  1. Learn one word in a family: "cat"
  2. Change the first letter: "bat," "mat," "sat"
  3. You can now spell many words!
  4. Listen for the rhyme—same ending sound = same pattern
Challenge: Can you add more words to the -at family? What about -et, -it, -ot, -ut?

Spelling Practice Activities

The more you practice, the better you'll spell! Here are fun ways to practice spelling:

Activity 1: Sound it Out

Say a word slowly, listening to each sound. Write each sound as a letter. Example: /c/ /a/ /t/ = cat

Try These: sit, run, pen, wet, box, ten

Activity 2: Rhyme Match

I say a word, you spell a rhyming word. If I say "cat," you might spell "bat" or "mat"!

Try These: dog → ___, sun → ___, pig → ___, sit → ___

Activity 3: Rainbow Writing

Pick a word. Write it in different colors on paper: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple! Say each letter as you write.

Activity 4: Word Boxes

Write letters in boxes to spell a word. Skip a box between words.

cat

Activity 5: Word Tracing

Trace words in a tray of sand, shaving cream, or flour with your finger. Feel the letter shapes!

Spelling Tip: Practice a little bit every day. 10 minutes of spelling practice is better than 1 hour once a week!

Quiz Time!

🇬🇧 UK Year 1 Standardised Tests

British National Curriculum — Ages 5–6 — Subject-wide assessments

🇺🇸 US Kindergarten Standardised Tests

Common Core & NGSS — Ages 5–6 — Subject-wide assessments

🇬🇧 UK Year 1 Maths Assessment

British National Curriculum — Subject-Wide Standardised Test

25:00
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🇬🇧 UK Year 1 English Assessment

British National Curriculum — Subject-Wide Standardised Test

25:00
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🇬🇧 UK Year 1 Science Assessment

British National Curriculum — Subject-Wide Standardised Test

25:00
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🇺🇸 US Kindergarten Math Assessment

Common Core Standards — Subject-Wide Standardized Test

25:00
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🇺🇸 US Kindergarten ELA Assessment

Common Core Standards — Subject-Wide Standardized Test

25:00
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🇺🇸 US Kindergarten Science Assessment

NGSS Standards — Subject-Wide Standardized Test

25:00
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