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Printable Cold Lady Who Swallowed Snow Worksheet | Grade 1
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This printable reading comprehension worksheet helps students in Kindergarten through Grade 2 recall key details from the story, 'There Was a Cold Lady Who Swallowed Some Snow.' Visual answer choices scaffold learning for emerging readers and English Language Learners, ensuring they demonstrate mastery of recall without being limited by writing skills.
At a Glance
- Grade: 1 · Subject: ELA
- Standard:
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.1.1— Ask and answer questions about key details in a text to demonstrate understanding.- Skill Focus: Reading Comprehension & Recall
- Format: 1 page · 5 problems · Answer key included · PDF
- Best For: Post-reading assessment and literacy circles
- Time: 10–15 minutes
What's Inside
Inside this single-page PDF, you find five targeted comprehension questions for the 'Cold Lady' narrative. Each question is paired with three colorful illustrations serving as multiple-choice options. This structure supports students in identifying setting, characters, and plot points, such as object colors and character motivations.
Zero-Prep Workflow
This resource follows a zero-prep workflow. First, print the single-page document (30 seconds). Second, distribute the sheets during your literacy block (1 minute). Finally, review the answers as a group or use visual cues for quick formative grading (30 seconds). Total teacher prep time is under two minutes. It is an ideal choice for sub plans or check-ins.
Standards Alignment
Aligned to CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.1.1, this worksheet requires students to answer questions about key details. It also supports CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.K.1 with visual scaffolding. Both standard codes can be copied directly into lesson plans, IEP goals, or district curriculum mapping tools to ensure instructional compliance.
How to Use It
Use this as a 'cool-down' activity after a read-aloud. It serves as a formative assessment tool; observe students to identify gaps in background knowledge. The expected completion time is 10 to 15 minutes, making it a perfect transition activity between direct instruction and independent reading centers.
Who It's For
Designed for Kindergarten through Second Grade, this activity supports students needing visual aids. It naturally pairs with a winter anchor chart or a sequencing lesson. Differentiation is built-in via visual prompts, making it accessible for students with diverse needs or those starting their literacy journey.
The CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.RL.1.1 standard emphasizes that answering questions about key details is the foundation of literary analysis. This worksheet targets that plain-English skill by requiring students to recall specific nouns and motivations from the text. According to a ScienceDirect TpT Analysis, high-quality visual scaffolding in early childhood ELA materials significantly reduces cognitive load, allowing students to focus on the semantic retrieval of story information rather than the mechanics of decoding complex written options. By using three-choice visual arrays, the resource minimizes "guessing bias" while maintaining high engagement levels for young learners. This approach aligns with best practices for early literacy intervention, ensuring that assessment remains a true measure of comprehension. Educators can confidently integrate this tool into their winter curriculum as it provides a clear data point for progress monitoring toward foundational reading benchmarks and long-term literacy growth.




