Views
Downloads

Fruit and Vegetable Spelling Worksheet | Grade 1 Essential
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.
You'll still be able to track student progress and results from your teacher account.
This Grade 1 ELA worksheet helps students master common fruit and vegetable vocabulary through interactive spelling and coloring. By completing partial words, learners strengthen their phonemic awareness and letter-sound correspondence. It provides a multi-sensory approach to literacy, combining writing with visual art to reinforce word recognition and spelling accuracy in early learners.
At a Glance
- Grade: 1 · Subject: ELA
- Standard:
CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.L.1.2.E— Spell untaught words phonetically, drawing on phonemic awareness and spelling patterns- Skill Focus: Vocabulary and Spelling
- Format: 1 page · 22 problems · Answer key included · PDF
- Best For: Morning work or literacy centers
- Time: 15–20 minutes
The worksheet features 22 specific fill-in-the-blank items where students must identify the missing letters for various produce items like "Be__" or "P__". Alongside the text, a column of color cues guides students to color the corresponding illustrations. This single-page PDF includes a clear layout and a comprehensive answer key for quick grading and immediate feedback.
Zero-Prep Workflow
- Print: Send the single-page PDF to your printer (30 seconds).
- Distribute: Hand out the sheets to students with a box of crayons or colored pencils (1 minute).
- Review: Check the completed spelling and coloring as a whole group or during individual check-ins (5 minutes).
Total teacher preparation time is under 2 minutes, making this an ideal resource for sub plans or unexpected schedule changes.
This resource aligns with `CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.L.1.2.E`, focusing on phonetic spelling and word completion. It also supports vocabulary acquisition by helping students identify and label common objects. Both standard codes can be copied directly into lesson plans, IEP goals, or district curriculum mapping tools.
Use this as a formative assessment after a lesson on healthy eating or as a quiet morning work activity. Teachers should observe if students can identify the initial and final sounds of the words before writing. Completion typically takes 15 to 20 minutes, making it an ideal filler for transition periods or literacy rotations.
This is designed for first-grade students but works well for kindergarteners needing a challenge or second-grade English Language Learners (ELLs). It pairs naturally with a classroom anchor chart showing labeled pictures of food or a direct instruction lesson on the vowel teams found in produce names.
According to the RAND AIRS 2024 report, integrating visual arts with literacy tasks significantly improves retention of high-frequency vocabulary in primary grades. This worksheet applies those findings by requiring students to decode the standard CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.L.1.2.E through phonetic spelling while engaging in a coloring task that reinforces the semantic meaning of the words. By providing 22 distinct opportunities for practice, the resource ensures that students encounter a wide variety of spelling patterns. Research from Fisher & Frey (2014) suggests that such scaffolded word-completion tasks bridge the gap between phonemic awareness and independent writing. This worksheet serves as a reliable tool for building the foundational literacy skills necessary for reading fluency and academic success in early childhood education settings.




