Read and color Worksheets
Ages 6-7 · 2 worksheets · 2 total pages · Free previews · Print-ready PDFs
Free printable read and color worksheets for 1st grade students (Ages 6-7). Part of our reading reading comprehension collection. All worksheets are aligned to Common Core standards.

Preview of Read and color - Park. 2 variations available.
All Read and color Worksheets
Worksheet Details
| Grade | 1st Grade |
| Subject | Reading |
| Topic | Reading Comprehension |
| Standard | RF.1.4.A |
| Pages | 2 pages |
| Difficulty | Medium |
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Explore all of our 1st grade reading worksheets.
FAQ
What grade level are these reading worksheets for?⌄
These reading worksheets are designed for 1st Grade students (Ages 6-7). Print any one in the set for targeted practice, or download them together as a packet.
Can I use these for homeschool or the classroom?⌄
Yes. These worksheets work for homeschool, classroom, and tutoring. Use them as a morning warm-up, an independent center activity, or a fast-finisher task.
What reading level should a first grader achieve by year's end?⌄
By the end of first grade, most students should read at Guided Reading level I or J (Fountas and Pinnell), which corresponds to early chapter books and longer picture books with more complex sentences. CCSS RF.1.4 expects students to read grade-level text with purpose, understanding, accuracy, and fluency. A fluency benchmark of 40 to 60 words correct per minute is typical by spring of first grade. Worksheets with short passages followed by comprehension questions help assess whether children are not only reading the words but understanding the content. Children who fall significantly below these benchmarks may benefit from targeted intervention. Regular progress monitoring through comprehension worksheets helps teachers and parents identify struggling readers before the gap widens in second grade.
How can I improve my first grader's reading comprehension at home?⌄
Read together daily for 15 to 20 minutes, choosing books slightly above your child's independent reading level (you read the hard parts, they read the easier parts). Pause every few pages to ask questions: "What just happened?" "What do you think will happen next?" "How did that character feel?" After reading, have your child retell the story in their own words. Worksheets with short reading passages and comprehension questions provide structured practice that complements at-home reading. Building vocabulary through conversation and varied reading material is equally important. Research shows that children whose parents engage in dialogic reading (interactive reading with questions and discussion) show significantly greater comprehension gains than children who are simply read to passively.
What types of reading comprehension worksheets are most effective for first graders?⌄
The most effective first-grade comprehension worksheets include a passage at the appropriate reading level (Guided Reading D through J), a mix of literal and inferential questions, space for written or drawn responses, and text evidence prompts ("How do you know?"). Passages should be 50 to 150 words, covering both fiction and nonfiction topics. Worksheets that include a vocabulary preview (defining two or three key words before the passage) improve comprehension outcomes. Avoid worksheets that only test recall of details without asking children to think critically. Including at least one question that asks children to connect the text to their own experience builds engagement. Passages about high-interest topics (animals, space, sports, friendships) motivate reluctant readers to engage with the comprehension practice.
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