Kindergarten/Punctuation
Periods — End a Statement (1415)
Students practise adding a period to the end of simple telling sentences. Each prompt is a complete statement missing its final mark. Students read the sentence and rewrite it correctly on the line below — building the habit that every statement ends with a period.
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📊 Medium3
| # | Name | Qs | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|
1 | ID: 3370 | 8 Qs | |
2 | ID: 3371 | 8 Qs | |
3 | ID: 3372 | 8 Qs |
🔥 Hard3
| # | Name | Qs | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|
1 | ID: 3373 | 8 Qs | |
2 | ID: 3374 | 8 Qs | |
3 | ID: 3375 | 8 Qs |
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Quick Tip
A statement is a telling sentence. It ends with a period (.)
Teacher Resources
Teaching Notes
Point out that statements are "telling" sentences — they don't ask or shout. The voice stays level at the end.
Vocabulary
Period: Punctuation mark (.) used at the end of a sentence.
Statement: A sentence that tells something.
Common Mistakes
- Forgetting the period entirely
- Adding a question mark to a statement
Differentiation
SupportClap once at the end of each sentence — that clap is the period.
ChallengeWrite your own three statements about your favourite animal.
Discussion Questions
- How does your voice sound at the end of a statement?
Extension Activities
- Students write two statements about their morning and share with a partner.
Parent Tip
Point out periods in books and ask your child what they mean.
Learning Path
Skill Level
beginner
Estimated Time
10 minutes
Skills Practiced
period statements
