Free Veterans Day Remembrance Day Worksheets for 1st Grade

Download free printable Veterans Day Remembrance Day worksheets for 1st grade. Practice reading comprehension, noun sorts, and letter writing this November.

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Veterans Day 1st grade worksheets
Veterans Day 1st grade worksheets
Veterans Day vocabulary sentences worksheet
Veterans Day vocabulary sentences worksheet
Why we remember reading comprehension
Why we remember reading comprehension
Remembrance Day ceremony sequence activity
Remembrance Day ceremony sequence activity
Thank you veteran letter template
Thank you veteran letter template
Veterans Day noun verb sort
Veterans Day noun verb sort
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These completely free printable veterans day remembrance day worksheets for 1st grade provide essential social studies, reading comprehension, and foundational grammar practice for the month of November. Teaching young students about civic holidays requires a delicate balance of respect, historical context, and age-appropriate vocabulary. This robust 5-page PDF packet seamlessly integrates holiday awareness with core first-grade literacy standards, ensuring that classroom time spent on seasonal crafts also advances crucial academic milestones.

Educators can instantly build a cohesive autumn curriculum by combining these resources with previous seasonal packets. For teachers looking to transition their classroom focus after October, these civic holiday worksheets perfectly follow up on the gratitude concepts established in our Canadian Thanksgiving worksheets for 1st grade and our Canadian Thanksgiving worksheets for kindergarten. Moving from autumn harvest celebrations into November days of remembrance creates a highly structured, logical flow for early elementary social studies.

Inside the 1st Grade November PDF Packet

This printable bundle deliberately avoids overwhelming historical dates and instead focuses on the core themes of the holidays: peace, honor, memory, and gratitude. The layouts utilize clear, primary-ruled baselines that span the full width of the page, catering perfectly to first-grade handwriting development. Each activity targets a distinct academic goal:

  • Vocabulary Sentences: A combined reading and writing activity. Students learn eight core vocabulary words (veteran, poppy, flag, peace, remember, honor, parade, thank you) through visual icons and short definitions. They then use a provided word bank to complete guided fill-in-the-blank sentences.
  • Why We Remember Reading Comprehension: A short, highly decodable reading passage explaining the purpose of the holidays. After reading the paragraph, students answer four direct comprehension questions using multiple-choice bubbles and primary handwriting lines to prove they understood the text.
  • A Respectful Ceremony Sequence: A chronological logic and writing task. Students look at four scenes of a remembrance ceremony (arriving, placing poppies, standing quietly, thanking a veteran). They must logically order the events and write a short descriptive sentence for each “First, Next, Then, Last” stage.
  • Thank You, Veteran Letter: An introduction to functional letter writing. Using guided prompts (To, Dear, Thank you for, You help by, From), students draft a respectful letter to a service member and use the designated box to draw a small symbol of peace like a poppy or dove.
  • Noun and Verb Sort: A foundational grammar exercise. First graders read twelve picture-supported vocabulary words and must correctly classify each into the “Nouns” or “Verbs” column. Finally, they combine one noun and one verb to write an original sentence at the bottom of the page.

Practical Classroom Center Implementation

Download the high-resolution file and print the packet on standard 8.5″ x 11″ copy paper. Ensure your printer dialogue is set to “fit to printable area.” The “Noun and Verb Sort” and “Vocabulary Sentences” pages operate brilliantly as independent morning work or dedicated literacy centers, requiring minimal teacher intervention.

We highly recommend using the “Why We Remember” reading comprehension page during a whole-group guided reading session. Read the passage aloud together to help students identify challenging phonetic blends, then allow them to complete the multiple-choice questions independently. The “Thank You, Veteran Letter” serves as a beautiful culminating activity that you can actually mail to local veteran organizations or display proudly on a November bulletin board.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this packet cover both Veterans Day and Remembrance Day?

Yes. Because the United States celebrates Veterans Day and Canada/Commonwealth nations celebrate Remembrance Day at the exact same time in November, these worksheets are designed to be universally applicable. The graphics feature both American and Canadian flags, and the text explicitly mentions both holidays, making it perfect for North American classrooms looking for inclusive civic resources.

Are the grammar and reading activities aligned with Grade 1 standards?

Absolutely. First-grade literacy standards require students to identify basic parts of speech, specifically nouns (people, places, things) and verbs (action words). The “Noun and Verb Sort” directly assesses this skill. Furthermore, the reading comprehension page uses short, decodable sentences and asks students to recall specific details directly from the text, which is a cornerstone of early elementary reading assessments.

How should I support struggling readers with the vocabulary page?

Before assigning the worksheet, write the eight core vocabulary words on the whiteboard and discuss their meanings as a class. Show them physical examples if possible (like a real poppy or a flag). During the independent work phase, direct struggling readers to look closely at the small picture icons next to the word bank, which serve as crucial visual context clues to help them solve the fill-in-the-blank sentences.

Can I use this packet in a split Grade 1/2 classroom?

Yes. The reading passage and grammar sorts are perfect for first-grade review, while second graders can be challenged to use more complex sentence structures on the sequencing page and the thank-you letter. The primary-ruled, full-width baselines provide enough space for older students to write detailed, multi-sentence responses, making the bundle highly versatile for split-grade teaching environments.

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