ClassWeekly

Free Letter Recognition Worksheets for All Grades

Preschool through 5th Grade · Print-ready PDFs

What is ClassWeekly?

ClassWeekly offers free worksheets and printable learning resources for kids in preschool to grade 5. All worksheets are aligned to Common Core standards and designed by educators. Become a member to access the full library and download unlimited PDFs.

What K-5 reading worksheets are on ClassWeekly?

Reading worksheets on ClassWeekly cover alphabet recognition, phonics, sight words, fluency, reading comprehension, vocabulary, and text analysis for Preschool through 5th grade. Every worksheet is tagged to a specific Common Core ELA reading standard and prints cleanly in black and white. The library covers both foundational reading skills (RF standards) and literary and informational text comprehension (RL and RI standards).

Reading is a stack. Kindergarten and 1st grade are mostly phonics and decoding. 2nd and 3rd grade shift toward fluency and basic comprehension. 4th and 5th grade move into longer passages, inference, and text analysis. The ClassWeekly reading library covers every step in that stack.

The page covers alphabet recognition, beginning phonics (CVC words, blends, digraphs), sight words by grade, fluency drills, vocabulary, reading comprehension, story elements, inference, figurative language, and standardized-test-style passages. Every worksheet aligns to a specific Common Core ELA reading standard, either RF (foundational skills) or RL/RI (literature and informational text).

If your kid is struggling with reading, drop one grade below their current level for the foundational skills (phonics, sight words, fluency) and stay at grade level for comprehension. Lots of strong readers had a reading gap in 1st or 2nd grade that closed by 4th. The trick is steady practice on whatever the weak link is.

Every worksheet prints cleanly in black and white, including the comprehension passages with the questions on a separate part of the page. There's room to write directly on the sheet.

The library works for several use cases: classroom morning work, homeschool curriculum supplement, summer review, intervention practice, or just five extra minutes of reading on a Tuesday because your kid is bored. Pick a worksheet, print it, hand it over.

Last reviewed: April 2026

Common questions about reading worksheets