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All About Me Worksheet | Grade 1 Essential Printable - Page 1
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All About Me Worksheet | Grade 1 Essential Printable

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Paste this activity's link or code into your existing LMS (Google Classroom, Canvas, Teams, Schoology, Moodle, etc.).

Students can open and work on the activity right away, with no student login required.

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Description

This Grade 1 All About Me worksheet helps students practice writing personal information while building self-awareness. By completing 16 specific prompts, learners develop the ability to share their identity and preferences in a structured format. This activity serves as a foundational writing exercise that bridges the gap between personal experience and formal composition.

At a Glance

  • Grade: Grade 1 · Subject: ELA
  • Standard: CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.1.2 — Write informative texts to name a topic and supply some facts.
  • Skill Focus: Personal information and self-expression
  • Format: 1 page · 16 prompts · No answer key needed · PDF
  • Best For: Back-to-school icebreakers and student portfolios
  • Time: 15–20 minutes

The worksheet features a vibrant, student-friendly layout with 16 distinct tasks. It includes basic identification fields for name, age, birthday, and address. A dedicated "Favorites" column covers nine categories such as color, food, and music. Larger open-ended boxes allow for drawing or writing about hobbies and fun facts, concluding with a career aspiration prompt.

Zero-Prep Workflow

  • Print: Generate the single-page PDF for your entire class in seconds.
  • Distribute: Hand out the sheets during morning work or a social studies block with no additional setup.
  • Review: Quickly scan completed pages to gain insights into student interests and writing levels.

This resource is designed for immediate classroom implementation with a total teacher prep time of under 2 minutes, making it an ideal sub plan or first-day activity.

Standards Alignment

This activity aligns with CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.1.2, which requires students to write informative/explanatory texts in which they name a topic and supply some facts about the topic. By documenting their own lives, students meet the standard's requirement for factual reporting. Both standard codes can be copied directly into lesson plans, IEP goals, or district curriculum mapping tools.

How to Use It

Use this worksheet during the first week of school as a formative assessment of handwriting and basic sentence structure. It also works well as a "Student of the Week" feature where the child shares their answers with the class. Expect completion within 15 to 20 minutes depending on the student's writing speed and the depth of their responses.

Who It's For

This resource is tailored for Kindergarten through Grade 2 students, including English Language Learners who benefit from the visual cues and simple prompts. It pairs naturally with a "Me Museum" project or an introductory lesson on community and identity. It is also suitable for special education settings focusing on personal safety and identification skills.

Research by Fisher & Frey (2014) emphasizes the importance of "writing to learn" and the use of personal narratives to build student engagement in early literacy. This All About Me worksheet utilizes the CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.1.2 standard to ground self-expression in formal writing structures. By providing 16 specific prompts, the resource scaffolds the transition from oral storytelling to written documentation. According to the Fisher & Frey framework, connecting academic tasks to a student's lived experience increases cognitive buy-in and retention of writing mechanics. This printable tool serves as a low-stakes entry point for Grade 1 students to practice naming a topic—themselves—and supplying relevant facts. Such activities are essential for developing the self-regulation and identity-building skills necessary for later academic success. The structured format ensures that even emerging writers can participate fully in the classroom community while meeting core curriculum requirements for informative text production.