Engage your kids in these amazing printable animals and their babies’ worksheets to foster their love for animals. Included in this fun-packed bundle is a great selection of exercises to get preschool, kindergarten, and grade 1 kids learning about animals and their young ones. Be it flashcards, quizzes, or mazes; matching or fill in the blanks; or even a cut and glue fun activity, this worksheet bundle is never short of immersive activities!
The included colorful animals and their young flashcards will assess two major skills, identifying and memorizing, these printable animals and their young flashcards to improve learners’ vocabulary with the names of animals and their babies.
Included in this bundle pack:
- Flashcards: to identify and memorize 42 animals and their babies
- Animals and their babies poster for your classroom
- Animal matching picture cards to get kids to match up the animal with its baby
All worksheets are included with answers.
The flashcards can be laminated and cut for frequent use, at home, or in class
How can I use these animal matching picture cards with my class? Choose from two sets of matching cards - some with the names of the animals and their young, and some without. Your students must match up the animal with its baby, as well as using the correct vocabulary when doing so. For instance, matching a dog with a puppy and a horse with it’s foal. You might also like this Animals and their Babies Worksheet. What will my child gain from these animal matching picture cards? This picture card activity will help your child to identify and name both animals and their young. This exercise will help them to expand their vocabulary as well as their knowledge of the animal kingdom and the world around them. If you want to teach children more about animal and their life cycles, have a look at these Animals that lay eggs vs Animals that are born worksheet. You might also be interested in this animals Worksheet. What is the name of a baby rabbit? A baby rabbit is known as a kit, which is short for a kitten. Kits are born in litters and a female rabbit, or a doe, will normally have between 12 and 13 kits in a litter. Although it is commonly associated with young cats, kitten is a name that is applied to young rabbits, beavers, and even rats.
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