Whether a sentence leads with an introductory phrase or word, a comma comes after it. Expand your kid's understanding of commas with our punctuation worksheet.
It’s time to make a stew...an editing stew! Students apply their knowledge of capitalization to write a plan for buying their ingredients on different days of the week.
When three suitors come knocking at the princess's door, which one will she choose? Read The Three Princes, then take the place of the king in an exercise.
Kids will decide where to put apostrophes in contractions with this rainbow-themed activity. Students will be given a pair of words and the corresponding contraction, but they'll be responsible for filling in the missing apostrophe. They'll be contraction
Teach your students about contradictory phrases that go by the funny sounding name of "oxymoron." After your students match two words together to make oxymorons, they’ll write their own creative sentences using this fun figurative language tool.