How to Create Your Own Worksheet
Worksheets are hard to make. The worksheets you might find online might not be what you are looking for, but you can make your own! This will take between 10-35 minutes.
This article needs an editor's attention, for reasons mentioned on its discussion page. Please edit this article and remove this notice once these issues have been resolved. Notice added on 2014-08-10. |
EditSteps
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1Choose a subject. If you are a teacher, what subject and which grade do you teach? The worksheet you will be making should only be focused on one part of one subject in one curriculum.
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2Get information on your chosen subject. Most things about Science, Maths and English can be found on the "BBC Bitesize" website. However, if you are trying to teach something else, like French, you will need to look somewhere else. Search on Google and then choose a source which you trust. When you reach the website you want to go, click on the item which interests you.
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3Open your text editor. Title your worksheet with something like "Kinds of energy - 6th grade". On the next line, Type in fields for the name and date. After that, start typing out your questions. Here are a few examples: "When you kick a football, you give it k_____ energy.", "How many days in a year? 300, 369 or 365?", and "What is the opposite of white? ______".
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4Use a point system. When you have finished typing out your questions, type in one more line that says something like "Score: /30", with 1 point for every answer field. If one question has 3 answer fields, the question should be worth 3 points, not 1 point.
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5Print your worksheet. When you reach school, hand out the worksheets and correct them as you normally would.
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EditTips
- If you have a photocopier at school, you won't need to print your worksheet multiple times at home. Set the photocopier to make one copy for every student, preferably double-sided if your worksheet is two pages long. A4 paper is the best for worksheets.
EditWarnings
- You should only use information from sources you trust. If you don't trust them, don't use their information.
EditThings You'll Need
- Text editor (Microsoft Word, OpenOffice, etc.)
- Internet connection
- Printer
Article Info
Categories: Pages Needing Attention | Teacher Resources | Teaching
Recent edits by: Khatt, Hasbeen400
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 598 times.