The worksheets are the perfect learning activity that helps a child get comfortable with conjugating the verb or finding an appropriate noun form for the sentence given. Practicing with these resources, students need to choose one option out of the two given.
Carefully selected simple sentences help children concentrate on the subject-verb agreement. You can start this worksheet as choose the correct option, then discuss how the choice was motivated by the form of the verb, an article, or what was the number of objects or people implied.
To make this task more communicative, hand out a worksheet per pair. The first student takes a copy and uses it as a questionnaire. He or she reads out an incomplete sentence substituting the gap with a “Buzz!”, and gives two options. The second student says the option he/she thinks is correct. The first student puts a tick, and, as soon as the worksheet is ready, they discuss the answers given. Ask all pairs to hand over their worksheets to the right, Resume the activity with the second student asking and ticking off the given answer.
To have more fun, you can make it a guessing game. Do as in the previous instruction. The first student read out an incomplete sentence, but he’ll she doesn’t give options. The second student guesses the missing word. If one doesn’t guess at first take, ask him or her to try again. Every student has three tries for every sentence.
This activity is suitable for 5-7 years old students, U.S. school: Kindergarten, 1st grade.
These learning pages are suitable for color and black and white printers.