Super Teacher Worksheets

4th Grade Common Core: L.4.4

Common Core Identifier: L.4.4 / Grade: 4
Curriculum: Language: Vocabulary Acquisition and Use
Detail: Determine or clarify the meaning of unknown and multiple-meaning words and phrases based on grade 4 reading and content, choosing flexibly from a range of strategies.
273 Common Core State Standards (CCSS) aligned worksheets found:
Vocabulary words are used in a sentence. Below each sentence, define each word. Words include glutton, promptly, gaze, approached, and commotion.
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Common Core
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Vocabulary words for these chapters include gnawing, objectionable, wits, scheming, hoisted, gratified, scruples, and hysterics.
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Vocabulary words for these chapters include oblige, seized, delicate, delectable, attire, idiosyncrasy, and destiny.
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Vocabulary words for these chapters include noble, thrashing, vaguely, incessant, mercilessly, monotonous, and snare.
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Words for this section of the book include fiercely, rejoiced, aloft, vanish, purebred, listless, scramble, and gorged.
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Words for these chapters include trembled, pompous, rapidly, ails, meekly, desolation, and forlorn.
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Use the guide words at the top of the page to answer the questions.
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This worksheet has a missing letter puzzle. Words include crimson, pounced, beaming, frantically, acquainted, and primly.
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This worksheet has a vocabulary matching activity. Words include absorbed, clattered, abruptly, vandalism, phony, fad, forbidding, scattered, empathize, and authority.
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Choose the correct definition for each underlined vocabulary word. Words include plot, mastermind, fellow, disruption, and profit.
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Vocabulary words on this printable include spattered, expanses, expedition, prospect, absent-minded, stout, pompous, and hastily.
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Vocab words on this printable include dignity, intention, outraged, neglected, protesting, consented, and ordinance.
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Words on this worksheet include spectacle, sympathetic, droll, astonished, spar, amid, scarcely, and sulking.
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Vocab on this worksheet includes exhibit, sensation, unforeseen, unique, descriptive, and remarks.
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The words on this worksheet include shrieking, nuisance, mischief, concerned, apparent, and corridor.
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This matching worksheet has vocabulary words for chapters 1 through 5. Words include skidded, constellation, missionary, fortunate, muttering,insulted, congregation, and potluck.
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Students write the missing letters in the puzzle. Word list: ignorant, imitated, whimpering, charming, and routine.
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Match each vocabulary word with its definition. Word list includes: strummed, complicated, appreciated, gentle, myths, swollen, swayed, and frilly.
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Discover the reasons animals migrate and read about the places they travel.
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Erik finds a strange-looking skeleton key in his grandfather's house, but what door does it open... and what will he find?
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Liz can't wait to see how her school picture came out, but when she sees it, all she can think about is getting retakes. That is until she finds a creative way to deal with the embarrassing photograph.
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When a stranger visits the house with her older brother, Ella becomes jealous.
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On her way to soccer camp, Tara worries what the other kids will say when they see the black stitches on her face.
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Maureen thinks fortune telling is spooky, but when her friend Becca pulls her to Madam Ursula's fortune telling booth, Maureen is quite surprised by her reading.
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Jackie is spending the day at her grandparents' farm, and she can't wait to explore the place her grandparents call the dinosaur graveyard.
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Matt and Allie want to win the High Flyer kite competition, but their design isn't nearly as exciting as the other competitors. They try to add some extra flare to the kite but it just might cost them the win.
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While Alicia helps her grandparents move into their new house, she finds an old diary in the attic. Alicia can't put the diary down since it was written by a dancer and Alicia dreams of becoming one. But when she finds out who the diary belongs to, she just might achieve her dream.
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Andy doesn't like going along with his dad on all the weekend errands. But when the final stop turns into an underwater adventure, Andy learns some errands can actually be fun.
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Justin and Mary are vacationing at their uncle's lake house, and when Uncle Thomas tells them about the Foggy Figure that haunts the lake, they're determined to see it with their own eyes. But the fog is holding a surprise they never would've suspected.
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When Marcus, Lexi, and Adam enter a labyrinth race, they discover there's more to winning a maze than just luck.
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Here's a fiction piece called "Singing Cousin". Nikki is worried that her cousin Bella will embarrass her in front of her friends. After all, Bella sang just about everything she said. Will Nikki make it through the three-day visit or will Bella's singing ruin everything?
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It's Emily's first time in New York City. Everything is bigger and brighter, but Emily can't help missing the peacefulness of home. Will the big city be big fun like her parents promised?
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When Michelle's best friend Paige suddenly becomes popular, Michelle feels left out. But when Michelle mumbles something mean about Paige and someone overhears, rumors start to run wild through the school. Can Michelle set things straight and get her friend back?
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Laura wants to be elected the first class leader and wear a shiny gold badge for all to see, but when her best friend also runs for the position, Laura must decide if winning is more important than taking the position from someone who really deserves it.
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Cindy wants to win the community fishing contest by catching the biggest fish, but she gets a big surprise that may win her a trophy after all.
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When Phoebe has to make a flag of the country that best represents her nationality for the International Luncheon, she doesn't know what to do. She's eight different nationalities all in one. But with some creative thinking, Phoebe finds a way to create a flag that proudly displays who she is.
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Arianna is excited when her cousin asks her to be the flower girl in her wedding, but when Arianna finds out flower girls are usually very young, she doesn't want to do it. Can her mother convince her that the job is about more than age in time for the wedding?
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With basketball tryouts around the corner, Jason is busy working on his free throws. He wants to make every one to impress his coach, but shooting for perfection isn't easy.
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Terrance is terrified of spiders, so when his school trip is to go spider watching, he doesn't want to go. Still, his teacher is convinced Terrance will be amazed by the spiders' webs. Can the spiders' talents outweigh Terrance's fear?
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Ted wishes he could trade his older sister, Kate, for his neighbor Aaron, but when Aaron comes to spend the afternoon, Ted realizes he's glad he has Kate.
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With the charity dance just days away, Shauna wants to run and hide. But the dance is for a good cause and all her friends are going. She enrolls in a few dance classes and tries to learn enough not to embarrass herself. But on the night of the dance, she'll feel silly for a completely different reason.
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Shelby thinks she knows everything about Hayword Elementary and its students, but when a new girl shows up, Shelby jumps to the wrong conclusion about the girl's appearance.
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Darren forgot all about his science project that's due tomorrow. Now he can't go to the new skate park with his friends. And how will he come up with a project in one day? But his mom saves the day with an idea that's exploding with fun.
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Darla and Erin are blaming each other for breaking their teacher's glass apple, but when they each explain what happened, they'll realize how they were only seeing one side of the story.
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When Valerie has to present a personal item to the class as a way to get to know her, she can't figure out what to bring. Everything in her room is either too personal or doesn't say much about her. But a package from her favorite aunt just might contain the answer.
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William can't wait for the new puppy to arrive, but when everyone is focused on the puppy and William isn't allowed to go to the park, he's not sure being a pet owner was what he thought it would be. Can he learn to put the puppy's needs first?
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When Jameson eavesdrops on his Mom's phone conversation, he thinks his mom is setting up a play date with the younger boy down the street. Jameson pretends to study to get out of it, but after he wastes the entire afternoon bored in his room, he discovers he missed a lot of the conversation he was trying to overhear, and he also missed out on an afternoon of fun.
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Reese spends his entire weekend trying to beat his new video game, but when he finally does, he's run out of time to write his English essay. Or has he? Daylight Savings just might save his English grade.
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When Mr. Miller asks the class to name their fears, Clayton is sure he doesn't have any. But he'll learn that being afraid to admit your fears might be the scariest thing of all.
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Corrine loves the gymnastics unit at school, so when she steps into the gym and finds out they are watching DVDs of past Olympic Games, she's disappointed. But seeing the athletes gives her a great idea of how they can bring the Olympic Games to their school.
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Seth isn't happy about the project his teacher assigned, especially since he has to stay up late to complete it. But the perigee moon just might be more exciting than he realized.
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Charla loves hanging out and going to the beach with Aunt Monica, but now that Aunt Monica is pregnant, Charla worries things are becoming all about the baby.
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Daniel can't wait to go to Disney World, but the long car ride is torture. He can't imagine a worse road trip until his father tells him about a nightmare of a trip he took as a kid. Now Daniel hopes there's enough time to hear all his mother's road trip stories, too.
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A fun poem about children who play outside in the snow.
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A thoughtful poem about what to do when you cannot sleep at night.
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This poem shows how hard it was to live on the frontier long ago. Milking cows, darning socks, and hemming a dress were some of the many household chores.
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A persuasive article about the sport of running.
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In 1953, two climbers, Edmund P. Hillary and Tenzig Norgay, became the first men to climb to the summit of Mount Everest.
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From ancient cave discoveries to Aztec ceremonies to playing a part in the invention of the microwave, popcorn has a fascinating history.
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Read the compare and contrast passage about porpoises and dolphins. This article has a question page, a cut-and-paste Venn Diagram activity, and a vocabulary worksheet.
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The article explains how constellations got their names (comparing it to finding pictures in the clouds) and how the same constellation can be known by different names across the globe.
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Discover the stink bug - an animal that uses a noxious odor to scare enemies away.
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Learn about several birds that run and walk and swim instead of fly.
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Discover how polar bears have adapted to live in the Arctic.
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Students will enjoy reading about bats, skunks, owls, and other nocturnal animals.
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A porcupine rattles its quills and sends off an unpleasant odor to protect itself. Finding yourself on the wrong end of a porcupine's quills may be more thrills than you're looking for.
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Learn the differences between crocodiles and alligators.
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A poem about a colony of ants jubilantly collecting crumbs for their queen.
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Learn about the anatomy and behaviors of one of the most feared spiders in the world.
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Ancient sailors may have seen manatees and thought they were mermaids.
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Read about the three different types of wetlands:  swamps, bogs, and marshes.
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Are grasshoppers a farmer's friend or foe?  Actually, both.  Find out how grasshoppers can help and harm humans.
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When President Theodore Roosevelt wouldn't shoot a bear on a hunting trip, he became known as a kind and humane person.  The toy that was named after him reminds us of his legacy.
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Discover many fascinating facts about chameleons.
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Discover everything you wanted to know about spiny hedgehogs.
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This biographical article highlights the major events of Abraham Lincoln's life.
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Even though they are sometimes called earth pigs, aardvarks aren't really related to pigs at all.
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Bighorn Sheep have horns that weigh up to 30 pounds. Males will battle by ramming each other in the head.
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The honey badger is arguably the most fearless animal on Earth. It eats porcupines and venomous snakes, raids beehives for honey, kidnaps baby cheetahs, and steals food from hungry lions.
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The cutest mammals in Australia actually have very sharp claws and they spend more time asleep than they do awake.
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Have you ever heard of a barking deer? If you visit South Asia you may see muntjacs - small deer that bark like dogs.
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Learn about the unusual life of world's strangest-looking mammal.
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Learn about the weasel-like animal known as the polecat.
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Read about the slow-moving sloth from Central and South America.
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Bears don't wear glasses, but the spectacled bear from South America has circular markings that make it look like it's got spectacles.
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This strange looking animal has four legs, a long snout, large ears,and lurks in the forests of Central and South America.
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The wolverine is a solitary, but fierce, hunter who lives in snowy, northern climates across the world.
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Are dragons real?  You bet they are.  Indonesians know all about the fierce lizard known as the Komodo dragon.
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The world's smallest bird - the bee hummingbird - can hover in place, fly upside down, and even fly backwards.
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The flamingo is one of the most recognized birds in the world because of it's unusual body shape and hot-pink feathers.
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Owls have special adaptations that allow them to fly without making a sound, and hunt during the dark nighttime hours.
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The secretary bird is a large, terrestrial raptor from Africa. It eats mice, hares, mongooses, lizards, and even snakes.
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It's not a bird, nor a plane.  It's a flying fish!  Learn all about these strange animals.
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The hammerhead shark is one of the fiercest and most dangerous animals in the sea. It uses electroreceptors in its unusual-shaped head to find prey.
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Can your students tell a reptile from an amphibian?  This compare and contrast article will help students learn the differences between these two vertebrate groups.
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Find out about three different subgroups of arthropods- insects, arachnids, and myriapods.
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Earthworms have no eyes, no nose, no ears, no bones, no arms, and no legs. They do, however, have very complex bodies.
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I bet you didn't know that an octopus can vanish in a cloud of smoke. It's just one of the unique ways an octopus can defend itself.
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Learn about the three layers of the skin, and find out how skin keeps our bodies safe and healthy.
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John wants to have a picnic in the park like most Saturdays, but when his usual spot is taken, he and his mom end up by a statue dedicated to fallen soldiers. John learns about a Memorial Day service that has long been forgotten. But when he meets a special woman who knows about the service, he's determine to bring the tradition back.
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Erica's New Year's resolutions are a little too ambitious, but when her mom convinces her to come up with one resolution she can really stick with, Erica discovers the perfect plan for the New Year.
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This informative article compares and contrasts Thanksgiving in the United States to Thanksgiving in Canada. Approximately 3rd grade reading level.
(Approx. Grade Levels: 3-5)
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Read about the lucky turkeys that have been pardoned by American presidents throughout history.
(Approx. Grade Levels: 4-5)
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When Amerie's teacher tells the class how a nineteen-year-old girl began the tradition of giving Valentine's cards, Amerie is determined to start a new tradition in her school.
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Kaylan and Cody try to the find the owner of a lost kitten.
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Story and comprehension questions: Christmas shopping isn't easy for Colin. He wants to find the perfect gift for his parents, but he can't afford to buy anything his parents would actually want. Colin's older sister suggests he make something that will remind his parents of him every time they see it. Colin's special talent just might turn into the perfect gift.
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In Hawaii, Santa arrives in an outrigger canoe, or sometimes he even catches a wave and surfs into the islands. Learn about this, and other unique Hawaiian Christmas traditions.
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Learn about the terrestrial inner planets of our solar system.
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An article about the history of the Jack o' Lantern.  Includes comprehension and vocabulary questions.
(Approx. Grade Levels: 3-5)
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The poet uses a color array or words to describe a sunset in this poem.
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Students cut out the music notes, rests, and clefs and glue them next to the correct words. Includes whole notes through eighth notes, and whole rests through quarter rests.
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Students cut out the music notes, rests, and clefs and glue them next to the correct words. Includes whole notes through sixteenth notes, and whole rests through sixteenth rests.
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Students cut out the music symbols and glue them next to the correct words. Includes whole notes through sixteenth notes, whole rests through sixteenth rests, staff, common time, repeat bar, sharp, and flat.
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Label the notes, rests, clefs, and other basic notation.
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Read this article to learn all about our amazing sun!
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Students can read the Thanksgiving clues and fill in the words on this criss-cross puzzle.
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Find out how pattern camouflage, color camouflage, and mimicry can benefit predators and prey.
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When Michelle's best friend gets a horse for her birthday, Michelle wants one too. But it's not in her family's budget. Will this birthday be a flop or is there another way Michelle can learn to ride?
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This fun poem presents students with many examples of onomatopoeia, such as bang, crash, boom, clang, and quack.
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Some desert plants are adapted to thrive in dry and hot climates.
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Read about the differences between carnivores, omnivores, and herbivores.
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Look out! The world's second largest, and most ferocious shark may be swimming in an ocean near you.
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Did you know that a seahorse can't swim well and it can actually die of exhaustion in rough water? Learn many seahorse facts in this article.
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Find out how monarch butterflies protect themselves and learn about their transformation from caterpillar to butterfly.
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The word wizard finds challenging words from the novel and defines them for the group.
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A scientific article about atoms, the building blocks for molecules and everything that's made of matter
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In this manipulative matching game, students must match the music symbols cards with the correct corresponding word cards.
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Discover Mercury, the planet closest to the sun. Read the article and answer the comprehension questions.
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Learn about Venus, Earth's cloudy, volcanic twin.
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Learn all about Mars, Earth's nearest neighbor, and human efforts to explore the Red Planet.
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This prehistoric reptile looks like a small dinosaur. It has a thick tail, clawed feet, and strong jaws. Underwater, they keep their mouths open, and use their worm-like tongue to lure in prey.
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Can you match each vocabulary word from the story to the correct definition? Use this vocabulary matching worksheet to expand students vocabulary and deepen their understanding of the text.
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Students must choose the correct definition for the underlined word. Vocabulary words include musty, loomed, and stammered.
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Use a dictionary to look up the definitions for the underlined vocabulary words. Then, write the correct definitions on the lines provided.
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Can you figure out the vocabulary word from the story? Fill in the missing letters to reveal each word. Words include bounding, stumbled, shimmered, and panting.
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Electric eels sure are electric, but did you know they're not really eels? Learn interesting facts about electric eels in this reading comprehension article. Includes comprehension questions, vocabulary words, and a writing prompt.
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Read each sentence and look up the definition of the underlined word. Write the definition on the lines provided. Words include boxcar, brook, and politely.
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Can you match each vocabulary word from the story to the correct definition? Words include hem, kettle, admired, and treasures.
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Read each sentence. One vocabulary word in each sentence is underlined. Choose the correct definition for the underlined word.
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Fill in the missing letters to create a vocabulary word from the story. Use the clues for help. Words include bleachers, crossly, growl, and mills.
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Are you able to match vocabulary from the story to the correct definiton? Words include ridiclious, smirked, putrid, and suspicious.
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Read each sentence and look up the definition of the underlined word. Write the defintion on the lines provided. Words include tiller, convention, and gleaming.
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Are you able to choose the correct definition for the underlined vocabulary word? Words include absentmindedly, immediately, and fortunately.
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Fill in the missing letters to create a word from the story. Then write the full word on the line provided. Words include embroidered, protested, lurched, and adrift.
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Match each vocabulary word from the story to the correct definition. Words include emergining, provisions, regret, and enormous.
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When Bear sees the frozen lake outside his den, he is afraid that he might freeze too. Hare explains to him how the water in his body won't freeze easily like the water in the lake. Bear learns an important science lesson! Reading comprehension questions, vocabulary words, and a writing prompt are available for this story. An answer key is included.
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Read each sentence. Choose the correct definition for the underlined vocabulary word. Words include ferocious, courageous, and hypnotized.
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Fill in the missing letters to create a word from the story. Then write the full word on the line. Be sure each word is spelled correctly. Words include serious, glaring, and demanding.
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Fill in the missing letters to create a word from the story. Then write the full word on the line. Vocabulary words include prairie, fiesty, harshly, and hearthstones.
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Read each sentence. Look up the definition of the underlined words in the dictionary. Write each definition on the lines provided. Words include clattered, suspenders, and rustle.
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Match each vocabulary word from the story to the correct definition. Words include petticoat, gleamed, meadow, and gullies.
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Spring has brought with it many surprises! The biggest surprise of all is an April Fool's Day joke! Poem includes reading comprehension questions, vocabulary words, and a writing prompt.
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Choose the correct definition for each underlined vocabulary word. Words include pungent, squall, eerie, and trembling.
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Match each vocabulary word from the story to the correct definition. Write the letter on the line provided. Words include sly, scuttling, squinted, and pesky.
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Did you know people have been chewing gum for thousands of years? Learn about the history of bubble gum in this fascinating article! Reading comprehension questions, writing prompt, and vocabulary words are included in this activity.
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Can you unscramble these vocabulary words from "The Boxcar Children"? An answer key is included.
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Match each vocabulary word from the story to the correct definition on the right. Write the letter on the line provided. Words include riot, chortled, appreciate, and peculiar.
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Fill in the missing letters to create a word from the story. Write the full word on the line. Be sure each word is spelled correctly. Words include civilized, corridor, and predicament.
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Read each sentence. Look up the definition of the underlined words in the dictionary. Write each definition on the lines below. Words include aquaintance, doused, and desolate.
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Learn all about whale sharks - the world's largest fish! This reading comprehension activity includes questions about the text, vocabulary words, and a writing prompt. An answer key is included.
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For this activity, students match the vocabulary words from the story with the correct definitions. Words include hysterical, forlorn, bovine, exasperated, ambled, and grimace.
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Vocabulary words in these chapters are abruptly, intent, jaunty, marionette, precisely, sternly, and plaintively.
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Did you know that stingrays are in a group of fish called batoids because their bodies look like bats gliding through the water? Learn this and other interesting facts about stingrays in this reading comprehension activity!
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Things can look a lot scarier than they really are when you can't see them clearly. That's what Dominick discovers when he loses his eyeglasses. This reading comprehension activity includes short answer questions, vocabulary words, and a writing prompt.
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This clever story is a retelling of Aesop's Fable. Activity includes thinking questions, vocabulary terms, and a journaling activity.
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Review the ten vocabulary words from chapters 1 through 5 from the book, Because of Winn-Dixie with these printable cards.
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Chapters 6-10 have 5 vocabulary word cards and 5 matching cards with the definition for each of them with this printable file.
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The vocabulary words for chapters
11-15 are: whimpering, imitated, ignorant, routine, and charming. Use the word cards and definition cards together to match and review.
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Read and review the vocabulary words and definitions for chapters 16 through 20 with these printable cards. You can laminate them so the cards can be reused.
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The vocabulary words in chapters 21-26 of the book, Because of Winn-Dixie, include: strummed, appreciate, complicated, arranging, swayed, swollen, gentle, and more. This file has printable word cards and definition cards for all of them.
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Students can practice their vocabulary words from chapters 1-3 with these printable vocab. word cards and definition cards.
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Learn and review the definitions for this set of vocabulary words, which includes: plaintively, marionette, precisely, sternly, jaunty, intent, and abruptly.
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Print and cut out these 10 cards for vocabulary practice. Five of them are the vocabulary words and the other five are the definitions.
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Review the definitions for the vocabulary words in chapters 10-12, including: anguish, indomitable, silhouettes, elation, and scoured.
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There are word cards and definition cards for the 4 vocabulary words in these chapters. Try laminating the cards so they can be reused.
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Your students will have fun reviewing the definitions to the vocabulary words with these printable vocab. cards.
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Learn and review the definitions for the vocabulary words in this group: immense, mingled, ghastly, devote, and sprawled.
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Print and cut out the 14 cards on this file to review the seven vocabulary words and their definitions.
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This printable has six vocabulary word cards and 6 definition cards to review for chapters 1-2.
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These vocabulary cards for chapters 3 and 4 have definitions for the words: bloomed, alarmed, clattered, suspenders, and rustle.
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Print and cut out these vocabulary cards to review the highlighted words from chapters 5 and 6 from the book, Sarah, Plain and Tall.
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The vocabulary words from chapters 7 and 8 include: squall, eerie, pungent, shuffling, herded, and trembling. Practice reading the words and learning the definitions for each.
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Print and cut out these 18 vocabulary cards to practice the words from chapter 9. If you want to reuse the cards, try laminating them.
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Print and cut out the vocabulary word cards and definition cards to review the vocabulary words from chapters 1-3.
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Use these printable vocabulary cards to practice the words from chapters 4 through 6. Laminate the cards to reuse them over and over.
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This printable file has 12 cards (6 word cards and 6 definition cards) to use for vocabulary review from chapters 7 through 9.
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The vocabulary words for chapters 10 through 13 include: crossly, bleachers, mills, homesick, and growl. These printable cards will help students memorize their definitions.
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Each of the six vocabulary words for chapters 1 through 5 have a corresponding definition card so students can use the cards to review.
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Some of the vocabulary words for chapters 6-10 include: authority, scattered, forbidding, phony, vandalism, abruptly, clattered, and more. Print and cut out the cards to review.
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Print and cut out these vocabulary cards to review the words from chapters 11-15, including: fellow, masterminded, ruckus, disruption, royalty, remarkable, recovery, and more.
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Print and cut out the vocabulary cards to review the words for chapters 1 and 2.
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The vocabulary cards in this printable features the words: chamber, musty, loomed, slanted, stammered, and swiftly.
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There are ten vocabulary cards in this printable which include 5 word cards and 5 corresponding definition cards.
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Your students will review the vocabulary words from chapters seven and eight with these printable vocabulary cards.
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The vocabulary word cards and definition cards in this printable features the words: budge, bounding, panting, shimmered, and stumbled.
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Print the vocabulary cards from this file to review the vocabulary cards from chapters 1 through 3. Words include: putrid, ridiculous, smirked, suspicious, scurried, grumbled, shrieked, and harbor.
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The printable vocabulary cards will help students review the words: gleaming, convention, tiller, voyage, and compartment.
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Print and cut out these 12 vocabulary cards to review the words from chapters 7 through 9. Use card stock paper or laminate them if you want to use them over and over.
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The vocabulary words from chapters 10 through 12 can be reviewed with these printable cards with 6 of the cards being word cards and the other 6 being definition cards.
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To review the vocabulary words from chapters 13-17, this printable file has 16 vocab. cards for your students to use.
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There are five vocabulary words for chapters 18-20, including: calculate, route, frantic, disgusting, and murmured. Print and cut out these cards to study their definitions.
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The vocabulary cards for chapters 21-24 feature the words: irritating, courageous, ferocious, hypnotized, concluded, and moaned.
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Finish up the vocabulary words for the last 3 chapters of the book with these vocabulary cards. Print and cut them out for your students to study from.
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There are seven vocabulary word cards in this printable file and seven corresponding definition cards to study from.
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The vocabulary words for chapters 5 and 6 include: predicament, corridor, civilized, recall, and pace. This printable file has word cards and definition cards to study from.
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The five vocabulary words for chapters 7 and 8 are: bluffing, revolting, cautiously, disposed, and ashamed. Print and cut the vocabulary cards out for your students to use.
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Students can review the words: glumly, acquaintance, doused, and desolate with these printable vocabulary cards.
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The last two chapters of Chocolate Fever have seven words for vocabulary review, including: offend, relieved, distributing, indeed, disappearing, foil, and warehouse.
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This printable file contains vocabulary word cards and definition cards for the six vocabulary words in the first two chapters of Stone Fox.
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The twenty vocabulary cards for chapters 3 and 4 include ten word cards and ten definition cards. Print and cut them out to use for studying.
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Print and cut out the vocabulary cards in this file to review the words: clutching, represented, contestants, moccasins, and determined.
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The ten vocabulary cards in this printable file are made up of 5 word cards and 5 definition cards. Use can print them on card stock paper or laminate them to reuse them again and again.
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The last two chapters of Stone Fox has ten vocabulary words to review, including: permitted, outskirts, sprang, massive, instantly, disqualified, glimpse, indicated, limp, and magnificent.
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The eight vocabulary word cards also have eight corresponding definition cards to use for reviewing the vocabulary words from chapters 1 through 4 of Charlotte's Web.
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Chapters 5 through 8 of Charlotte's Web has ten vocabulary words to review with these printable vocabulary cards. Print them on card stock paper or laminate them so they can be used over and over again.
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Have your students practice their vocabulary words from chapters 9 through 12 with these print-and-cut vocabulary cards.
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Use these printable vocabulary cards to study the vocab. words from chapters 13-16, including: mercilessly, thrashing, monotonous, vaguely, snare, distinguish, and reputation.
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The vocabulary words for review in chapters 17-19 feature: fiercely, aloft, vanish, rejoiced, gorged, and listless. Use the printable vocabulary cards to help study the definitions of the words.
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The last few chapters of Charlotte's Web has 10 vocabulary words for review, including: trembled, pompous, phenomenon, meekly, desolation, forlorn, and sentiments. Print and cut out the vocabulary cards to help study the words and definitions.
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This printable file has 30 cut-apart cards with words and definitions for the vocabulary words for chapters 1 through 4.
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Students can practice the definitions for the words: outraged, intention, dignity, vigorously, protesting, neglected, consented, and ordinance.
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This printable file has 10 vocabulary word cards and definition cards that can be cut apart and used for practice.
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Print out these vocabulary cards to practice the definitions for the words: sensation, remarks, exhibit, unforeseen, novelty, descriptive, and unique.
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Students can match the definition cards to the word cards in review for the vocabulary words in chapters 17 through 20.
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Your students will learn about how the first settlers in America established their colonies and the hardships they faced.
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This file has a cute poem for teaching students about magnetic properties. There's also a vocabulary page and a page with comprehension questions.
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Students can use the clues to figure out the Halloween-themed words in this crossword.
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This file contains 30 task cards, each with a sentence. Read the sentences and choose the correct words.
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Read the sentences on the task cards. Complete each sentence with the correct word.
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This poem uses clever wordplay to talk about the season of spring. Students will answer reading comprehension questions, complete a vocabulary exercise, and follow a writing prompt.
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This is a story about a boy and his stuffed animal, and how he learns he can sleep without it if he wants to. Students will complete a series of reading comprehension questions to test their recollection of the story.
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Read this story about a groundhog and his other animal friends. Then answer the comprehension questions, complete the vocabulary activity, and respond to the writing prompt.
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This printout features a chart of common Greek and Latin prefixes and their meanings.
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Read about the first stadium built in Rome and see how it's still used today. Then answer 6 short answer and multiple choice questions.
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This first set of daily ELA worksheets covers a lot of review topics to help students getting back in the swing of things. They'll identify adjectives, differentiate between possessive and plural nouns, proofread sentences, and more.
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Did you know koi are a kind of carp? Koi come in a variety of colors, patterns, and fin shapes. They're lovely to look at, but their price and life spans might surprise you!
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These daily ELA review sheets cover a variety of language arts skills for students at a fourth-grade level, including suffixes, commas, verb tense, and more.
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Practice more ELA skills with this next set of worksheets. Topics include spelling, transition words, homographs, digraphs, and more.
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Print off this week's set of ELA Buzz worksheets and have your students practice important fourth grade skills such as prepositions, suffixes, subject-verb agreement, and more.
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This week's daily ELA worksheets cover important language arts concepts such as metaphors, proofreading, coordinating conjunctions, articles, and much more.
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Keep those ELA skills fresh with this week's set of daily ELA Buzz worksheets for fourth grade. Skills this week include title capitalization, homophones, compound words, quotations, and more.
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Cut out the terms at the bottom of the page and glue them under the corresponding pictures.
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Use these vocab cards to reinforce students' understanding of election-related words like vote, ballot, candidate, governor, president, democracy, and more.
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Fill in the blanks with the words from the word bank to complete this cloze activity all about voting and elections.
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Use this set of daily ELA review worksheets to practice skills such as simple and compound sentences, title capitalization, parts of speech, idioms, and more.
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Practice important language arts skills with this week's set of ELA Buzz worksheets. These review pages cover topics such as prepositions, suffixes, prefixes, capitalization of titles, and more.
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These engaging, spiraling ELA review worksheets cover key 4th grade language arts skills such as coordinating conjunctions, reading comprehension, possessives, synonyms, and more.
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Keep on reinforcing those fourth grade language arts skills with this next set of daily ELA review worksheets. Skills featured this week include fixing misspelled words, identifying homophones, simple and compound sentences, and much more.
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Identify misspelled words, use reflexive pronouns, learn to fix double negatives, and more with this week's set of daily ELA review worksheets.
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This week in 4th grade ELA Buzz, students will review skills like idioms, synonyms, spelling, suffixes, homographs, and more.
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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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Offering an informative look at the layers of the Earth, including the crust, mantle, inner core, and outer core, this printable comes complete with comprehension questions and is great for teaching geology concepts.
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Practice more crucial 4th grade English language arts skills this week with our next set of ELA Buzz.
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This week's set of review worksheets includes exercises on superlative and comparative adjectives, compound sentences, analogies, and more.
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Work on key parts of fourth grade ELA curricula this week with our daily spiral review worksheets. Topics include suffixes, quotations, synonyms, and much more.
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Make sure your students are practicing ELA skills everyday with this set of spiral review. They'll practice adverbs, homophones, reading comprehension, and more.
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Daily practice helps make sure students don't fall behind or forget important ELA skills. This week students will review metaphors, double negatives, reflexive pronouns, and more.
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Review homophones, irregular verbs, subject-verb agreement, and much more with this week's set of daily ELA Buzz worksheets.
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With this week's set of daily ELA review worksheets, students will practice important language arts concepts such as idioms, formatting titles, recognizing double negatives, proofreading, and more.
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Keep those ELA skills fresh through the end of the school year by staying on top of these daily review sheets. This week, students will work on adverbs, prefixes, prepositional phrases, and much more.
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Practice important fourth grade skills with this week's packet of language arts review worksheets. Topics covered include homophones, comparative and superlative adjectives, turning lists into complete sentences, and more.
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Continue with daily grammar practice, vocab review, and conventions questions! Skills include acronyms, progressive tense verbs, punctuating dialogue and citations, spellings of unaccented final syllables, and more!
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Practice proofreading, vocabulary, spelling, and more with this week's set of daily ELA review worksheets.
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Keep reviewing important 4th grade language arts skills this week with our daily review worksheets.
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Review simple, compound, and complex sentences, as well as other important 4th grade ELA skills like plural possessives, metaphors, and much more.
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Practice using phrases rooted in mythology like "Pandora's box," correctly punctuate dialogue, spell absorbed prefixes, choose between words with similar meanings, and more in this set of five English skills worksheets.
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Practice essential 4th grade grammar, convention, and spelling skills, such as relative pronouns, subordinating conjunctions, commas with certain coordinating conjunctions, homophone usage, and even explaining proverbs!
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Review comparative and superlative adverbs and adjectives, punctuating speech, modal auxiliaries, shades of meaning, transitional words and phrases, identifying intended audience, and more in this week's grade 4 ELA Buzz set.
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Make sure your students end the year on a strong note by wrapping up 4th grade ELA Buzz. This week's set includes questions about text features, complex sentences, homophones, suffixes, and more.
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Discover why volcanoes erupt; learn the four different types of volcanoes; and read interesting volcano facts. Includes five comprehension questions.
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Discover new facts about our home planet.
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Find out about the cold, mysterious planet of Uranus.
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The word wizard finds tricky vocabulary words from the story and defines them.
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