Possessive pronouns Worksheets
Ages 6-7 · 2 worksheets · 2 total pages · Free previews · Print-ready PDFs
Free printable possessive pronouns worksheets for 1st grade students (Ages 6-7). Part of our possessive pronouns pronouns collection. All worksheets are aligned to Common Core standards.

Preview of Possessive pronouns - Bamboo. 2 variations available.
All Possessive pronouns Worksheets
Worksheet Details
| Grade | 1st Grade |
| Subject | Grammar & Writing |
| Topic | Pronouns |
| Standard | L.1.1.D |
| Pages | 2 pages |
| Difficulty | Medium |
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FAQ
What grade level are these possessive pronouns worksheets for?⌄
These possessive pronouns 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 pronoun skills should first graders develop?⌄
First graders should develop several pronoun skills per CCSS L.1.1d: using personal subject pronouns (I, you, he, she, it, we, they) correctly as sentence subjects, using object pronouns (me, him, her, us, them) after verbs and prepositions, using possessive pronouns (my, your, his, her, its, our, their) to show ownership, and beginning to use reflexive pronouns (myself, himself, herself) in context. Students should understand that pronouns replace nouns to avoid repetition: instead of writing Sarah went to Sarah's locker and Sarah got Sarah's book, we write Sarah went to her locker and she got her book. Worksheets that present sentences with repeated nouns and ask students to replace them with the correct pronoun build this skill directly. Matching activities connecting nouns to their replacement pronouns (the girls = they, Mr. Smith = he, the dog = it) reinforce the noun-pronoun agreement that is essential for clear writing. First-grade pronoun instruction builds the foundation for the pronoun-antecedent agreement work expected in second and third grade CCSS language standards.
How do you teach pronouns to first graders?⌄
Teaching pronouns to first graders builds on kindergarten exposure by adding explicit instruction on pronoun types and practice with pronoun-noun agreement. Start with subject pronouns by showing pictures and modeling: here is a boy. He is running. Here are two girls. They are reading. Use a pronoun chart organized by singular and plural, with picture cues for each. Worksheets where students read a sentence about a named character and rewrite it using a pronoun (Maria likes pizza becomes She likes pizza) build substitution skills. Introduce possessive pronouns through ownership activities: whose backpack is this? It is his backpack. It is her backpack. Worksheets with picture prompts showing ownership (a girl with a cat: this is ____ cat, choices: his, her) provide practice. For object pronouns, use worksheets where students choose between subject and object forms (she/her, he/him, they/them) in sentence context. Read-aloud activities where you pause on pronouns and ask who does this pronoun refer to? build comprehension skills alongside grammar knowledge. The key to first-grade pronoun instruction is consistent, contextualized practice that connects pronoun use to real reading and writing rather than isolated drill.
What are common first-grade pronoun mistakes?⌄
The most common first-grade pronoun mistakes include confusing subject and object pronouns (him went to the store instead of he went to the store, her is my friend instead of she is my friend), using me as a subject especially in compound subjects (me and my mom went instead of my mom and I went), inconsistent pronoun-noun agreement in writing (the dog wagged its tail. She barked. mixing it with she for the same animal), and unclear pronoun references where the reader cannot tell which noun the pronoun replaces. Worksheets that present two pronoun choices for each sentence, with the subject or object position highlighted, help students practice selecting the correct form. Error correction exercises where students identify and fix pronoun mistakes in sample paragraphs build proofreading skills. For the me-and-I confusion, teach the trick of removing the other person: you would not say me went to the store, so you should not say me and my mom went to the store. CCSS L.1.1d sets the expectation for pronoun use. Gentle, consistent correction in daily writing combined with targeted worksheet practice typically resolves most pronoun errors by the end of first grade or early second grade.
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