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Free Seasons Worksheets

Download free printable seasons worksheets and use them in class today. On this page, you can find a collection of PDF worksheets for teaching the four seasons in English and related seasons vocabulary. These seasons worksheets are ideal for kids and beginner ESL students. See below for the seasons worksheets currently available, and check the bottom of the page for related resources.

Related: Seasons Lesson Plan

Seasons Worksheets

Worksheet 1.

This first worksheet is great for learning the names of the seasons in English. There are 10 words related to seasons including the 4 seasons and related weather vocabulary. To complete the worksheet, students should look at the picture and then write the correct work in the blank space. Vocabulary includes spring, summer, fall, winter, hot, cold, cool, warm, seasons, and weather.

four seasons worksheets

Worksheet 2

To complete this next worksheet, students should look at the picture and then circle the correct word. There are pictures of the 4 seasons and 4 weather pictures. This worksheet is great for kids and beginner ESL students to learn the names and spelling of the seasons in English.

Seasons Word Search

Worksheet 3

This next seasons worksheet is a seasons word search. To complete the worksheet, students should find the words in the grid and then check off the words at the bottom once they find them.

Seasons printable worksheet

Worksheet 4

In this printable seasons worksheet, students will see 10 seasons/weather words with the letters jumbled up. To complete the worksheet, students should unscramble the letters and write the correct season word in the box provided.

Seasons Worksheets

Worksheet 5

In this last seasons worksheet, students will see 4 pictures of the four seasons and 4 weather pictures. To complete the worksheet, students should match the seasons to the correct weather word.

Related Resources

For more lesson materials for teaching about seasons and weather, check out these related resources: Seasons Flashcards Seasons PowerPoint Lesson List Of Words About Winter List Of Words About Fall Weather Worksheets Weather PowerPoint Lesson Weather Flashcards

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Kindergarten Weather and Seasons Worksheets

Weather and seasons worksheets: fall, winter, spring and summer.

Print out these free pdf worksheets to help your kids learn about the different types of weather and seasons.

homework about seasons

Sample Kindergarten Weather and Seasons Worksheet

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Seasons Lesson Plan

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  • Time: 40 mins - 1 hour
  • Objectives: Talking about the four seasons
  • Structures: "Let's ...", "In the (season) ..."
  • Target Vocab: spring, summer, autumn, winter, warm, hot, cool, cold, picnic, beach, walk, snow

Lesson Materials:

  • Flashcards: spring, summer, autumn, winter
  • Printables:
  • - Four Seasons worksheet
  • - Reader worksheets
  • - The Seasons Song song poster
  • - Warm Up & Wrap Up lesson sheet
  • Readers: Four Seasons or Silly Willy's Seasons
  • Songs: The Seasons Song
  • - lots of different colored paper cut into small squares
  • - felt pens
  • - prizes (e.g. candies or stickers)
  • - white card or construction paper cut into large circles (1 per group of 3 or 4 students)
  • - colored paper or card: reds, pinks, blues, greens, dark reds, oranges and browns
  • - sand or yellow glitter
  • - cotton wool / cotton balls
  • - Blu-Tack or tape to stick season clock crafts to the wall
  • - board with markers / chalk
  • - CD / Tape player / Computer or something to play the song on

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This lesson really helps students to learn the seasons of the year and words associated with each season. 

Lesson Procedure:

Warm up and maintenance:.

See our " Warm Up & Wrap Up " page.

New Learning and Practice:

1. Introduce the vocab: the four seasons Before class prepare four pieces of paper with the following written on:

  • Draw a tree. Draw flowers in the tree. Draw a sun and clouds in the sky.
  • Draw a tree. Draw lots of leaves in the tree. Draw a big sun in the sky.
  • Draw a tree. Draw some leaves in the tree. Draw leaves falling off the tree. Draw leaves on the ground. Draw clouds in the sky.
  • Draw a tree with no leaves. Draw snow on the ground. Draw a cloud in the sky with snow falling.

Four students are going to read these and draw the pictures on the board. Alternatively, whisper the instructions into your students’ ears or show them flashcards to copy.

Once all 4 pictures have been drawn, point at the first picture and ask "When does the tree look like this?". Elicit / Teach "Spring" and write the word under the picture. Do the same for all for pictures and chorus each season word 4 times.

Next, put 4 boxes in the 4 corners of your classroom. Each box should be labelled with a season (e.g. one box will have "Spring” written on it, another "Summer", etc.).

Now model the activity: take one piece of paper and draw an ice cream. Elicit the word and then say "Where should I put this?" and gesture towards the 4 boxes. After receiving a reply for summer, go to the summer box and drop the paper in it. Next do the same for spring (a flower), autumn (a pumpkin) and winter (a woolly hat).

As each team has only one pen they will have to work together to come up with ideas and draw them. Then one player will have to rush to a box and drop the picture into it. Teams will probably find summer and winter easy but may need some prompting from you for spring and autumn. As they are drawing, walk around and ask questions (e.g. What is that?) and elicit / teach vocab. Make sure someone draws some key vocab from the song that will be sung later in the lesson (a picnic, beach, snow).

When the timer goes off get everyone to stop. You are going to count the number of papers each team has in each box – but you are going to be really strict! Throw out any badly drawn pictures which you can’t guess what they are and any pictures that are wrong or are not season specific. Elicit what each picture is when you hold it up. Count the scores and write them on the board. Then tell the class that they have an additional 5 minutes to finish but must not draw any pictures that other teams have drawn. Set the timer for a further 5 minutes and start.

When the timer goes off, be strict again about which pictures earn points and finally give out the prizes to the teams with the most points.

3. Do "Season objects writing" activity Your students are going to write the words for the pictures they have just drawn, so this is a great activity if your students are at a high enough level to write words (even with spelling mistakes). If not (for younger students), skip this activity and go on to point 4. Take the boxes with pictures inside and give the pictures out randomly to each group. Model by holding up one of the pictures (e.g. a flower) and elicit the word. Then turn over the piece of paper and write "flower" on the back.

When the timer goes off, tell everyone to stop writing. On the board draw two intersecting lines so the board is divided into four equal squares. Write a season in each of the squares. Go around the class asking for the words they have written and write the words on the board – for each correct spelling the team wins a point (also, make sure they correct their spelling mistakes on the back of the pictures). At the end total up the points and award a prize to the winning team.

4. Play "Season Bingo" Keep the same groups together and the pictures that they have drawn. Get each team to deal out the pictures so that each student is holding the same number of pictures. The class is going to play "Season Bingo" with the pictures. The teacher says a season and a word (e.g. "summer – ice cream") and any students holding that picture can put it in the middle of their table. Keep going until one student has discarded his/her last card and shouted "Bingo!". Play a few rounds for fun.

5. Sing " The Seasons Song " Before class, print off the song poster for The Seasons Song . Put the song poster on the board and elicit the seasons and the activities on it. Then get everyone to stand up and follow you doing the actions and singing (as described below in Gestures for "The Seasons Song"). Play the song through 2 or 3 times.

Chorus: Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter. Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter.

Verse 1: In the spring, in the spring, It's nice and warm, nice and warm, In the spring, in the spring, It's nice and warm, nice and warm, Let's go for a picnic!

Verse 2: In the summer, in the summer, It's very hot, very hot, In the summer, in the summer, It's very hot, very hot, Let's go to the beach!

Verse 3: In the autumn, in the autumn, It's nice and cool, nice and cool, In the autumn, in the autumn, It's nice and cool, nice and cool, Let's go for a walk!

Verse 4: In the winter, in the winter, It's really cold, really cold, In the winter, in the winter, It's really cold, really cold, Let's play with the snow!

( download MP3 here )

Gestures for "The Seasons Song"

We'll use some fun gestures with this song:

- during the chorus do the following gestures, standing with legs apart (see picture):

  • "Spring" - hands up at 12 o'clock
  • "Summer" - hands out at 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock
  • "Autumn" - hands straight down at 6 o'clock
  • "Winter" - hands out at 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock

- during the verses do the following gestures:

  • "In the spring / summer / autumn / winter ..." - hands out, waving in time with the music
  • (Spring) "It's nice and warm" - hug yourself looking warm and happy
  • (Spring) "Let's go for a picnic" - gesture eating delicious food
  • (Summer) "It's very hot" - fan your face looking hot and bothered
  • (Summer) "Let's go to the beach" - gesture swimming
  • (Autumn) "It's nice and cool" - wipe your forehead looking like you have cooled down
  • (Autumn) "Let's go for a walk" - gesture walking
  • (Winter) "It's really cold" - shiver and look cold
  • (Winter) "Let's play with the snow" - gesture patting a snowball into shape and throwing it

We also have a video that you can stream in class to sing along with (Internet connection required):

The Seasons Song

  • Four Seasons (better for lower levels / younger kids)
  • Silly Willy's Seasons (better for higher levels / older kids)

Teacher: (pointing at the picture on page 1) Look at the girl. What's this with the girl (pointing at the dog)? Students: A dog! Teacher: Yes, it's her pet dog! Hello! So, what season do you think it is? Students: Spring! Teacher: Yes, good job, it's spring! And is it cold in spring? Students: No, it's warm. Teacher: Ok, let's check (reading on page 1) "It’s spring. It’s nice and warm". Well done! (Reading again) "What shall we do?". Well, it's nice and warm. What do you think they should do in spring? Students: Go for a picnic! Teacher: Let's see (turning the page and reading) "Let's go for a picnic!". Yes, that's right. Look, what are they having for their picnic? etc.

Get the students really involved in the story by asking lots of questions about the different things in the pictures. When you get to the end, find out which season each student likes best, for example:

Teacher: (reading on pages 9 and 10) "Which season do you like best?". (Pointing at the seasons pictures) Which season do you like best Miki? Miki: Um ... summer! Teacher: The summer. Yes, I like summer too. What do you do in summer, Miki? Students: I go to the beach. Teacher: Yes, it's hot in the summer, isn't it? So the beach is a good place to go. How about you, Tomas? Which season do you like best? Students: Winter! etc.

After reading the story, give out a reader worksheet to each student and have everyone match the seasons to the actions. Then go through the answers as a class.

Alternatively, watch our video version of the reader (Internet connection required):

Teacher: (pointing at the picture on page 4) Look at Silly Willy! What is he doing? Students: He's going for a walk! Teacher: Yes, that's right! And how is the weather? Students: It's sunny! Teacher: Yes, good job! And what season do you think it is? Students: Spring? Teacher: Ok, let's check (reading on page 5) "One spring day, Silly Willy went outside. It was warm and sunny. There were lots of flowers and rabbits were playing in the fields.". Good job, it is spring!

Get the students really involved in the story by asking lots of questions about the weather during different months and activities they do (and don't do) in their country, for example:

Teacher: (reading on page 5) "What did Silly Willy do? He tried to build a snowman!". Build a snowman in spring? Do you build snowmen in spring? Students: No! Teacher: Of course not. It's too warm for snow in spring. When do you build snowmen? Students: In winter! Teacher: Yes, that's right. So what do you do in spring? Students: We go for picnics. etc.

After reading the story, give out a reader worksheet to each student and have everyone answer the questions. Then go through the answers as a class.

7. Do the "Seasons Clock" craft This is a great craft which you can hang on the classroom walls and update each season or even each month. Before class there are a few things you will need to prepare:

  • cut large circles out of construction paper or white cardboard – enough for each group of 3 or 4 students. This will be the base of the season clock.
  • for spring, you’ll need different colored paper or card: reds, pinks, blues, greens – students will cut into flower shapes (for really little ones you’ll have to cut flower shapes out yourself before class)
  • for summer, you’ll need sand or yellow glitter (you can get from craft stores) – students will make a beach scene
  • for autumn, you need different colored paper or card: dark reds, oranges and browns – students will cut into leaf shapes (for really little ones you’ll have to cut leaf shapes out yourself before class)
  • for winter, you’ll need cotton wool / cotton balls – students will make a snow scene with this.
  • you’ll also need glue and pens or even paint if you wish

Put the class into groups of 3 or 4 and give out the materials to make the season clocks. Start off by getting everybody to draw 4 lines from the center of the circle to the outside, so that you create 4 different areas (one for each season). Write the word for each season in each segment. If you have taught months, get everybody to write the months in order around the edge of the clock, with 3 months in each segment (you can just use the first letters of each month), so that it looks like the image below:

Now comes the fun part – everyone is going to get creative and decorate the clock – cutting out flower shapes and gluing onto spring, cutting out leaf shapes and gluing onto autumn, making a beach scene in summer (put glue on the paper and then sprinkle over the sand/glitter to make the beach – use blue colored pens or paint for the sea) and gluing cotton wool for snow in winter. Let everyone add extras, e.g. a big sun in summer, seasonal clothing, etc.

When everyone has finished, stick the crafts onto the wall and give each team a pin (or something sticky, like blue tak) to place in the season (or month) that it is now.

In future lessons you can refer back to the clocks and have your students move the pin as the seasons (and months) change.

Everyone rushes around picking up pictures and placing them in the summer box. Then do the same for the other seasons.

1. Assign Homework: " Four Seasons " worksheet. 2. Wrap up the lesson with some ideas from our " Warm Up & Wrap Up " page.

Print Outs / Worksheets:

Lesson Plan

Four Seasons

Reader worksheet (Four Seasons)

Reader worksheet (Silly Willy's Seasons)

Song poster

Flashcards:

tag

Songs & Readers:

The Seasons Song (click to download)

The Seasons Song

Silly Willy's Seasons

Additional materials:

Seasons vocab crossword

Seasons vocab word search

Additional worksheet - Suzy’s wardrobe

Warning

  • To view and print a flashcard or worksheet click on the thumbnail image.
  • For detailed printing instructions, click here .

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The four seasons provide an engaging theme for building skills in a variety of areas. These printable resources include seasons worksheets, STEM activities, fiction and nonfiction passages, social studies, science and art projects, and monthly and weather-themed activities, plays, and poems.

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The Seasons - English reading resource for ESOL teachers

The Seasons – English Reading Worksheets

5 short English reading passages about the seasons with simple comprehension questions.

Description

Reading activities in english about the four seasons.

All texts are short with 4 or 5 sentences written in the Present Tense. The rest of the page has simple comprehension questions to check understanding.

✅ PRINTABLE (PDF) VERSION ✅

The five reading passages are: The seasons of the year , Spring , Summer , Fall / Autumn and Winter .

These worksheets should only take 10-15 minutes each so are a great activity to warm up a class or to end the day. You could do a worksheet every day (lasting a school week) or leave them as homework. These reading passages would be great in an emergency as a quick filler and you may also find them useful to hand out to fast finishers (so they don’t disrupt others).

Bonus Listening Activity We have included a handout with these 5 stories on one page (without exercises). This can be used where the teacher gives the comprehension questions orally, or can be used in conjunction with the audio on our YouTube channel (or via EASEL) so they can read as they listen (without the distraction of other activities on the page). The EASEL online version has the listening as a part of the digital resource. Students just click the listening button to start the audio on their devices.

There is another sheet with the 5 stories on one page, but this time with certain words missing and replaced by a blank line where students can fill with the word they hear on the listening.

All reading texts, questions and instructions are 100% in English. The Printable PDF Version of this resource includes:

  • Teacher Guide in English – (1 page)
  • Guide to our videos and audio – (1 page)
  • Reading with Questions – The seasons of the year – (1 page)
  • Reading with Questions – Spring  – (1 page)
  • Reading with Questions – Summer  – (1 page)
  • Reading with Questions – Fall / Autumn  – (1 page)
  • Reading with Questions – Winter  – (1 page)
  • 5 Stories on one page – (1 page)
  • 5 Stories on one page with missing words – (1 page)
  • Teacher Answers – (6 pages)
  • Reading passages with no questions – (5 pages)

✅ DIGITAL VERSION (EASEL by TpT™) ✅

With EASEL, you can assign these interactive digital activities to your students which can be completed on any device. EASEL is ideal for use in distance learning settings and also in the physical classroom.

The Digital Easel Version of this resource includes audio as a part of the resource. Students just click on the listening button to activate it. (No need to listen via YouTube)

This printable PDF version and the Digital EASEL version are both available immediately upon purchase. Pen and paper or digital … you choose which version fits best in your classroom’s learning model.

English Listening

Here is the audio that accompanies each of these short reading passages. The videos will also give you an idea of the content and level of these texts.

  • Seasons of the Year
  • Fall / Autumn

Note: The audio of the listening appears on our YouTube channel and also as a part of TPT’s EASEL (digital resource). The recording is spoken by a native English speaker.

We have a version of this resource in Spanish: Las estaciones del año – Lecturas en español

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Four seasons printable worksheets

Teach your kids about the changing seasons with these months and seasons worksheets for kindergarten!

Any time is a good time to learn about the four seasons!

With my seasons worksheets for kindergarten , your children will enjoy learning more about the seasons of the year. Plus they will practice months of the year some more, too!

Make sure to also get my days and months tracing sheets here.

Seasons worksheets for kindergarten

Four seasons worksheets for kindergarten

These worksheets are perfect for your kindergarten students as well as older preschoolers who are keen to learn about the different seasons.

On the first page, you’ll find match the seasons worksheet . Children will match various pictures to the correct season – spring, summer, fall, and winter.

Next, they will learn to recognize which months of the year belong to each season. This is a cut and paste activity .

Children will practice reading the names of each season and months of the year and match them together. If they can’t read yet, you can still have a discussion and gently guide them to the correct answers.

Next page includes the seasons’ names, so your students can practice tracing them.

The last page is open to more creative expression. Kids can draw their favorite things about each season. And write which one is their favorite.

These worksheets can be a good additional material for teaching seasons in kindergarten and preschool. Homeschooling families will find them helpful as well!

To download, just go to the end of this article and you’ll find your pdf there.

Seasons worksheets PDF

You can have a look below at what’s included in this four seasons worksheets pdf bundle:

Match the seasons worksheets

Don’t miss: Fun days of the week worksheets for kindergarten

Months and seasons worksheet

Seasons worksheets for kindergarten PDF

5 thoughts on “four seasons printable worksheets”.

Can I have printables for kindergarten?

Yes, of course. At the end of each post there is a link to download the PDF. You can pick and choose which ones work best for you.

thank you very much. it really helps me to teach my child especially now in these times we have still not have the real schooling so i need to supervise my kindergarten baby girl. more power

Thank you so much for the free printables. I’m trying to keep my grand sons from falling behind. This pandemic has forced me to have to teach them at home. Your resources are so important to me. Thank you for making this FREE. I have tried to find all the help I can. Just feeding my ravenous littles costs more than I can afford.

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Four Seasons

Four Seasons introduces students to the different traits and features of each season. Students will learn when each season “starts” every year in the United States. They will discover that people participate in different activities and eat more of certain foods during these periods.

The “Options for Lesson” section provides quite a few suggestions for additional activities to add to the lesson. One suggestion is to take students outside on the same day every month of the school year and observe where the sun is in the sky. You could also have them note what the weather is like at this time as well.

Description

Additional information, what our four seasons lesson plan includes.

Lesson Objectives and Overview: Four Seasons teaches students what causes the seasons to change from one to the next and why. Students will discover the role of Earth’s rotation around the sun in these changes. They will also learn that some places don’t have all four seasons. This lesson is for students in 1st grade and 2nd grade.

Classroom Procedure

Every lesson plan provides you with a classroom procedure page that outlines a step-by-step guide to follow. You do not have to follow the guide exactly. The guide helps you organize the lesson and details when to hand out worksheets. It also lists information in the yellow box that you might find useful. You will find the lesson objectives, state standards, and number of class sessions the lesson should take to complete in this area. In addition, it describes the supplies you will need as well as what and how you need to prepare beforehand. For this lesson, the only other supplies you will need in addition to the worksheets are colored pencils.

Options for Lesson

There are several suggestions in the “Options for Lesson” section for additional activities or tasks or alternate ways to approach parts of the lesson. You might want to incorporate these into the lesson if you have time or want to extend it. One idea is to show students additional images for the first activity that represent different seasons and have them guess which one the picture depicts. Another option is to complete the practice page together as a class rather than individually. Students could four draw pictures from scratch, one for each season. One more idea is to demonstrate the tilting of the earth and show how it rotates around the sun. Students could stand in a circle to help with the demonstration. Some of the materials you could use include a globe, a flashlight, and so on. Another option is to take students outside at the same time each day once a month throughout the year and track where the sun is in the sky.

Teacher Notes

The paragraph on this page provides a little extra guidance for the lesson. It mentions that the science behind the cause of seasons can be a little hard to understand for many younger students. Therefore, you should focus more on the seasons themselves and what happens during each one. You can use the blank lines on this page to write down thoughts or ideas you have as you prepare.

FOUR SEASONS LESSON PLAN CONTENT PAGES

The Four Seasons lesson plan contains three content pages. The first page explains what a season is and how many seasons there are. The weather changes throughout the year in most places in the world. For the most part, there are a few months at a time that have roughly the same weather. Then the next few months have different weather. These periods are what we call seasons. There are four seasons: spring, summer, fall (or autumn), and winter.

A season is a period of the year with different temperatures, weather patterns, and changes in nature that differ from other periods. The parts of the Earth between the North and South Poles usually experience the four seasons, including the United States. Not every place on Earth has these changes, though. In some places, it feels like summer or winter all year long. Places closest to the equator, for instance, almost always have hot temperatures. And the North and South Poles are always cold.

Seasons occur because of the rotation of the Earth on its axis. One half of the Earth, or one hemisphere, leans toward the sun while the other hemisphere leans away. When the Northern Hemisphere leans toward the sun for part of the year, there is more sunlight and warmer weather. This is when these places experience summer. During another part of the year, the Northern Hemisphere tilts away from the sun and gets less sunlight and cooler weather. This is when winter occurs.

When it is summer in one hemisphere, it is winter in the other. The different angles of the Earth, because it is tilted, cause the changes in the seasons. In between the hottest and coolest months, when the weather begins getting gradually cooler, is fall or autumn. Between the coolest and hottest months, when the weather begins to warm up gradually, is spring.

Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter

Students will discover that certain things happen during specific seasons. Where someone is in the world affects the changes they will see. The lesson explains the general changes and events for each season that people in the United States experience.

The spring season usually occurs from March through May. More specifically, the beginning of spring happens around March 21 each year. Trees, plants, and flowers begin to grow and blossom. Farmers begin to plant their crops during this time. As far as the weather goes, it is often rainy and windy, making it good weather to fly a kite!

Summer begins on approximately June 21 every year. The temperatures rise and can get really hot in some areas. Humidity can also get fairly high. Crops and plants begin to grow taller. During these months, thunderstorms occur frequently. In general, schools close for the summer vacation.

September, October, and November are the autumn months, and the season generally starts on September 21. The weather cools down a little, and farmers harvest their crops. The leaves of many trees turn from green to red, orange, and yellow before falling off. Animals start to store food for the winter. School starts up again around this time as well.

Finally, students will learn about winter. Winter begins on about December 21st every year. The weather is cold, and many places receive lots of frost, snow, or freezing rain. Plants die or at least don’t bloom anymore. The new year starts on the first of January. Some activities that people enjoy during the winter months include skating, skiing, and sledding.

FOUR SEASONS LESSON PLAN WORKSHEETS

The Four Seasons lesson plan includes four worksheets: two activity worksheets, a practice worksheet, and a homework assignment. Each of these worksheets will help reinforce students’ understanding of the lesson material in different ways. Refer to the guidelines on the classroom procedure page to determine when to hand out each one.

NAME THE SEASONS ACTIVITY WORKSHEET

For this activity, students will look at eight pictures. They must guess which season the pictures represent. You may choose to add any number of pictures if you want to provide students with additional practice.

COLORING PAGES ACTIVITY WORKSHEET

This activity worksheet provides four pictures for students to color, one for each season. Remember to provide coloring pencils or some other coloring utensils, such as crayons or markers.

FOUR SEASONS PRACTICE WORKSHEET

The practice worksheet has two parts. The first part requires students to look at a list of dates. They will then determine which season that date represents and write it in the space next to the date. For the second section, students must look at a list of phrases and figure out which season the phrase depicts.

TILTED EARTH HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT

For the homework assignment, students must draw a picture of the Earth tilted on its axis during each one of the seasons. In each box, they must list some activities that people do during that season or foods that people more often eat at those times. Students may need help from parents or older siblings for this assignment.

Students can use the graphic on the first content page for reference. It is the same graphic that the answer key uses to show what the Earth looks like during different seasons as it rotates around the sun.

Worksheet Answer Keys

The last three pages of the document are answer keys for three of the worksheets. One answer key is for the first activity and provides the correct responses for the eight pictures. The answer key for the practice worksheet provides the correct responses in red. The homework assignment also includes an answer key that displays the earth during the four seasons. Students’ responses will vary for the lists they provide. If you choose to administer the lesson pages to your students via PDF, you will need to save a new file that omits these pages. Otherwise, you can simply print out the applicable pages and keep these as reference for yourself when grading assignments.

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Four Season

Great information the videos and text were amazing to help students clearly understand the seasons which they were lacking knowledge of.

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Four season lesson plan

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Days, Months, and Seasons Worksheets

Make learning a fun and educational experience with this bundle of days, months, and seasons worksheets. Packed with printable charts of days, months, and seasons in attractive themes, this compilation also includes practice materials like completing the missing days of the week, identifying the months of the year, calendar quizzes on seasons of the year, and a lot more. Browse through some of these worksheets for free!

Days of the Week | Charts

Days of the Week | Charts

Filled with attractive illustrations of a pup, a rainbow, and ants, this compilation can be used as a visual aid in classrooms and also assists kids in mastering the sequence of the days of the week.

  • Download the set

Months of the Year | Charts

Months of the Year | Charts

Aimed at enhancing young learners' skills in identifying the months of the year, this set of printable anchor charts is sure to attract tiny tots.

Seasons of the Year | Display Charts

Seasons of the Year | Display Charts

Cultivate a rich learning experience on seasons of the year with these display charts. Let the students go on a cyclical journey through the four seasons with these attractive charts.

Writing Days, Months, and Seasons

Writing Days, Months, and Seasons

Let kids in grade 1 and grade 2 practice writing the seven days of the week and the four seasons, and also learn the chronological order of the twelve months of the year with these worksheets on days, months, and seasons.

Completing the Missing Days of the Week

Completing the Missing Days of the Week

Recite the days of the week in the correct order and fill in the missing days of the week. This activity also helps your little ones to learn how to order and spell the days of the week.

Completing the Missing Months of the Year

Completing the Missing Months of the Year

Reinforce your knowledge of the chronological arrangement of months by completing the missing months in this assemblage of days, months, and seasons pdfs.

Writing Days of the Week and Months of the Year

Writing Days of the Week and Months of the Year

Encourage kids in 1st grade and 2nd grade to seamlessly write the days of the week and months of the year and effortlessly master the spelling of the twelve months and the seven days of the week.

Days of the Week | Calendar Quiz

Days of the Week | Calendar Quiz

Test your knowledge on days of the week with these calendar quizzes. Read the clue and figure out which day of the week.

Months of the Year | Calendar Quiz

Months of the Year | Calendar Quiz

Are you looking for a way to assess your learners' understanding of the months of the year? We have the perfect practice material for you! Decipher the clues and answer the questions.

Seasons of the Year | Calendar Quiz

Seasons of the Year | Calendar Quiz

Go on a captivating journey into a world of riddles with these days, months, and season worksheets. Filled with an intriguing selection of questions, this resource is sure to grab learners' interest.

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The Reasons for the Seasons: 1st Grade Lesson Plan on Seasons

Learning about the seasons will provide an excellent vehicle to examine the circular pattern of the cycle, the matching of clothes to the appropriate season, the classifying of activities in each season and opportunities for the students to illustrate all of these things.

Gather students together and discuss with them the names of the seasons.Print each one on a separate chart paper. Help the students to think about how life changes with each passing season. Ask them questions such as: Do you wear the same clothes all year? Why or why not? When do flowers appear in gardens and parks?

Choose one of the books about seasons to share with your students.

Book suggestions:

Skip Through the Seasons by Stella Blackstone

Circle of Seasons by Gerda Muller

The Reasons for Seasons by Gail Gibbons

Ask what is one thing that happens in each season every year? Why does it happen in that particular season and not another?

A Class Project

Explain to the students that everyone is going to take part in making a mural to show each season. Have prepared a very large circle of mural paper (you may need to tape several widths together to make a really large area) divided into quarters. Each quarter should have one of the seasons as its title.

Go back to the charts and add the students’ observations as you investigate each season.

Discuss and add to the chart. What happens to the trees at this time of year? Are baby animals born? What clothes do we begin to wear? What sports or activities begin?

Task for the mural:

Invite each student to draw a Spring picture of an animal, plant, or activity (or cut out a suitable picture from a magazine). Paste the pictures on to the Spring quarter of the mural.

Continue discussion by asking what season follows Spring? What happens to the baby animals? How do the trees change? What different sports or activities begin? How are clothes different in the Summer? Add their observations to the chart.

Invite each child to draw a Summer picture of an animal, tree, or activity and paste the pictures on to the Summer quarter of the mural.

Ask the students what season follows Summer? How does the weather change in the Fall? What different activities take place in the Fall? What do animals do to prepare for the next season? What is different about the clothes worn at this time of the year? Why is this season called the “fall”? Add the observations to the chart.

Draw or cut out pictures and paste them on to the Fall quarter of the mural.

Review the different aspects of Spring, Summer and Fall. What happens to flowers, birds, trees and animals during the Winter? How do our own lives change during this season?

Draw or cut out pictures and paste them on the Winter quarter of the mural.

Follow-up Activity

After looking at the finished picture, share lots of discussion comparing the different activities, clothing, changes. It is important that the students come to the realization that the seasons form a cycle that is repeated every year - a circular pattern.Display the mural on a wall either in the classroom or outside in the hallway.

Then suggest to the students that they may like to make their own “Season Wheel”. Provide each student with 2 circles (one of them with a “quarter” cut out) Click here for pattern 1.Click here for pattern 2.

Ask them to make up their own illustrations for each of the seasons on the complete circle. Then join the two circles together with a brad fastener. This “wheel” emphasizes the repeating cycle of the seasons of the year.

The mural and “Season Wheels” will show a wide variety of seasonal activities. Ask your students if they think that people everywhere have the same seasons. This will open up the opportunity to examine other areas of the world and compare their seasons to your own.

The Seasons

The Seasons are the natural divisions of the year.

In many countries the Seasons are:

But some countries experience different seasons such as Dry and Wet in the tropics.

Every season is wonderful because the weather is so different!

And then spring starts again!

It is nice to love every season, because each one has its own feeling and joy that makes it special.

Start and End

When each season begins and ends is not the same everywhere!

Some countries choose different dates, or even have different seasons, but in the USA:

  • Spring begins at the spring equinox (equinox is when day and night have the same length)
  • Summer begins at summer solstice (the longest daytime of the year)
  • Autumn begins at the autumnal equinox (day and night the same length again)
  • Winter begins at winter solstice (the shortest daytime of the year)

Meteorologists (people who study the weather) use a simpler system of whole months like this:

Why Does it Get Hotter and Colder?

Because the Earth is tilted in relation to the Sun!

At some time of the year your place will get more sun (the days are longer and the nights shorter) ... this gradually warms up everything around you.

But later in the year the days get shorter (and the nights get longer) and so everything cools down.

This animation shows you why:

* Equinox and Solstice

Equinox: The time of the year when day and night are each 12 hours long and the Sun is at the midpoint of the sky.

Equinox happens around March 21 and around September 21.

Solstice: When the Earth is the most tilted away, or towards, the Sun.

The days when this happens are called:

  • Summer solstice (the longest day of the year)
  • Winter solstice (the shortest day of the year)

Solstice happens around June 21 and around December 21.

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homework about seasons

IMAGES

  1. The Four Seasons Reading Passages (Take Home Packet)

    homework about seasons

  2. Four Seasons Sorting Activity Free Printable

    homework about seasons

  3. Days of the week, months, seasons, weather, colors

    homework about seasons

  4. Kindergarten Activities For Seasons

    homework about seasons

  5. The Four Seasons Worksheet For The Kids

    homework about seasons

  6. Seasons Worksheets

    homework about seasons

VIDEO

  1. When homework is due right NOW!!! (a playlist) #darkacademia #lightacademia #classicalmusic

  2. Reflection Eternal

  3. Floating Market Magic: Barisal, Southern Bangladesh #usa #india #canada #uk #australia #brasil

  4. Vivaldi

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  6. FACTS with STATS 123 #shorts #ytshorts #facts #gamesofthrones #allseasons #imdb #favoriteseason

COMMENTS

  1. Weather & Seasons Worksheets and Printables

    Now you can turn this fascination into a teaching moment with our weather and seasons worksheets. Besides the basics, such as learning which months fall in which seasons, our weather and seasons worksheets explain forecasting, wind, and the water cycle. And with weather-related writing prompts, clever puzzles, cute coloring pages, and paper ...

  2. 240 Seasons English ESL worksheets pdf & doc

    A worksheet asking f. 20453 uses. ag23. THE SEASONS. There are 4 activiti. 20264 uses. alexbi. Join the dots (alpha. This is a join-the-d.

  3. Free Seasons Worksheets

    Worksheet 1 This first worksheet is great for learning the names of the seasons in English. There are 10 words related to seasons including the 4 seasons and related weather vocabulary. To complete the worksheet, students should look at the picture and then write the correct work in the blank space.

  4. Weather and Seasons

    Science Weather and Seasons Kindergarten Weather and Seasons Worksheets Weather and Seasons Worksheets: fall, winter, spring and summer Print out these free pdf worksheets to help your kids learn about the different types of weather and seasons. Sample Kindergarten Weather and Seasons Worksheet What is K5?

  5. Seasons Lesson Plan

    1. Introduce the vocab: the four seasons Before class prepare four pieces of paper with the following written on: Draw a tree. Draw flowers in the tree. Draw a sun and clouds in the sky. Draw a tree. Draw lots of leaves in the tree. Draw a big sun in the sky. Draw a tree. Draw some leaves in the tree. Draw leaves falling off the tree.

  6. The Seasons

    There are four seasons in every year, spring, summer, autumn and winter. Depending on where you are in the world, these seasons will occur at different times. In the Northern Hemisphere, which includes the United Kingdom, the four seasons happen at the following times: Spring - March until May.

  7. Seasons (article)

    Lesson 1: Seasons Science > Middle school Earth and space science - NGSS > The Earth-sun-moon system > Seasons Terms of use Privacy Policy Cookie Notice Seasons Google Classroom Review your understanding of seasons in this free article aligned to NGSS standards. Key points: Earth's axis is tilted.

  8. Seasons

    Seasons. The four seasons provide an engaging theme for building skills in a variety of areas. These printable resources include seasons worksheets, STEM activities, fiction and nonfiction passages, social studies, science and art projects, and monthly and weather-themed activities, plays, and poems.

  9. The Seasons

    All texts are short with 4 or 5 sentences written in the Present Tense. The rest of the page has simple comprehension questions to check understanding. The five reading passages are: The seasons of the year, Spring, Summer, Fall / Autumn and Winter. These worksheets should only take 10-15 minutes each so are a great activity to warm up a class ...

  10. Seasons Activity Worksheet

    Use this seasons worksheet to help your children apply their knowledge of the four seasons and their understanding of the way the months of the calendar year can fit into them. Learners are asked to draw pictures related to the four seasons into the relevant boxes. Your children could draw a frosty snowman for the winter months, or a beautiful sunflower for the summer. Then, they're asked to ...

  11. Seasons Worksheets for Kindergarten PDF

    On the first page, you'll find match the seasons worksheet. Children will match various pictures to the correct season - spring, summer, fall, and winter. Next, they will learn to recognize which months of the year belong to each season. This is a cut and paste activity. Children will practice reading the names of each season and months of ...

  12. season

    Introduction As a year passes, regular changes occur in the weather. This cycle of weather changes is divided into four parts, known as seasons. The four seasons are winter, spring, summer, and autumn, or fall. What Causes the Seasons The seasons are related to the way sunlight falls on different parts of Earth in the course of a year.

  13. Four Seasons, Free PDF Download

    The homework assignment also includes an answer key that displays the earth during the four seasons. Students' responses will vary for the lists they provide. If you choose to administer the lesson pages to your students via PDF, you will need to save a new file that omits these pages.

  14. Kids science: Earth's Seasons

    Science >> Earth Science for Kids The Science of the Seasons for Kids We divide up the year into four seasons: spring, summer, autumn, and winter. Each season lasts 3 months with summer being the warmest season, winter being the coldest, and spring and autumn lying in between. The seasons have a lot of impact on what happens on the earth.

  15. Seasons Teaching Resources

    Seasons refer to the different times of the year when the weather and nature around us change. Each season is associated with different weather conditions, and the seasons each have an effect on the environment, such as changes in plant growth and animal behaviour.

  16. Days, Months, and Seasons Worksheets

    Writing Days, Months, and Seasons. Let kids in grade 1 and grade 2 practice writing the seven days of the week and the four seasons, and also learn the chronological order of the twelve months of the year with these worksheets on days, months, and seasons. Download the set.

  17. Unit: Seasons and change

    Key Stage 1 Subjects Science Unit Overview: Seasons and change Curriculum Download (PDF) National Curriculum Observe changes across the four seasons Observe and describe weather associated with the seasons and how day length varies. Lessons: 6 lessons What do we know about the weather? Key Learning Copy Lesson Link View Lesson in classroom

  18. The Reasons for the Seasons: 1st Grade Lesson Plan on Seasons

    This will open up the opportunity to examine other areas of the world and compare their seasons to your own. Teaching Grades Pre-K to 5. Try this 1st grade lesson plan on seasons to help your students recognize the cycle and pattern of the seasons. They will also note suitable clothing, the changes in activities, animals and plants.

  19. The Seasons

    The Seasons. The Seasons are the natural divisions of the year. In many countries the Seasons are: Spring. Summer. Autumn. Winter. But some countries experience different seasons such as Dry and Wet in the tropics. Every season is wonderful because the weather is so different!

  20. Homework About Seasons

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