Your students have been hard at work all year gobbling up new vocabulary words! Assess your students’ abilities to read grade-level sight words using this quick reading inventory.
It’s almost the end of kindergarten! Use this helpful sheet of sight words to assess your students’ ability to recognize 75 common kindergarten sight words.
Your first graders have been hard at work on their reading skills this year! Use this quick one-on-one reading inventory to gauge and assess your students' abilities to read grade-level sight words.
Get your students excited about reading and all the words they know with this sight word worksheet. As they keep an eye out for sight words, they will also get faster at reading them!
This worksheet is a fun way to get in the Halloween spirit while also practicing reading and writing simple sentences! Using the picture clues and word options to help guide them, young learners will finish the sentences by writing in the missing words.
Sight words can be particularly tricky for little ones to learn, mainly because these words cannot be sounded out using conventional phonetic principles. One way to overcome this obstacle is to print out our sight words worksheets. With themed word searches, matching games, professionally illustrated coloring pages, and other fun activities, your young learner will master key words like the, are, does, who, not, and one in no time!
Set Your Sights on Reading Fluency with Sight Words Worksheets
Here’s the interesting thing about sight words: Once we master them, we never think about them again. But we also quickly forget just how difficult they were to learn. To the trained reader, words such as boy, girl, he, me, has, have, do, and does are easy to read, spell, and understand. But for beginning readers with developing brains, these sight words can be extremely tricky to grasp. Thanks to our sight words worksheets, parents and teachers can ease the confusion and put kids on the fast track to sight word proficiency.
One reason our sight words worksheets are so effective is they feature vibrant colors, as well as professionally drawn illustrations of recognizable objects, creatures, and characters to keep kids engaged as they learn. While you’ll never run out of sight word worksheets to print out, another fun way to practice this vital skill is during bedtime reading. Have your child flip through his favorite book and see if he can point to words like kite, orange, and egg. When he succeeds, lavish him with praise and watch his face light up!