Don't make things tense in your classroom when learning the difference between present and past tense verbs. These exercises allow your students to practice matching subjects and verbs independently.
Allow your fourth graders to identify all parts of prepositional phrases with these exercises that have them visualize steps and provide helpful hints.
Help students expand their knowledge of sentence structures with these exercises that encourage students to use correlative conjunctions in their writing.
Conjunctions are important for linking two ideas in a cohesive and fluid way. Give your fourth grader the skills they need to correctly use conjunctions with these exercises.
Relative pronouns make it simple for your fourth grader to describe the subject of a sentence in a fluid and orderly way. Give them the practice they need with these exercises and helpful hints.
Help develop the fluency of your student's writing with these exercises that help them understand the importance of matching object and subject pronouns with their antecedent.
These multiple choice parts of speech exercises will help your students learn how to distinguish between adverbs and, in addition to identifying the difference between interjections and conjunctions. With all of those parts of speech floating around, it’s important to make sure that students can complete the following types of sentences exercises that demonstrate mastery over the concepts of simple, compound, and complex sentences.
When it comes to parts of speech, there are a lot to learn. There's verbs and adjectives and adverbs and nouns...and let's not even start with pronouns and prepositions. If parts of speech is overwhelming to your child, they can relax...and so can you. With our parts of speech exercises, your kid start slow by scratching the surface of parts of speech learning. Have them try one of our quick multiple-choice quizzes to get more familiar with the different parts of speech they use and hear on a daily basis. Just read the sentence and identify the underlined part of speech -- how easy is that? Studying doesn't always have to be hard work, and here's a chilled-out, no-pressure way to help your child get a little stronger in language arts every day.