Class KG Punctuation Worksheet on Periods

Class KG Punctuation Worksheet on Periods
Class KG Punctuation Worksheet on Periods

Class KG Punctuation Worksheet on Periods

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Aishwarya Vijay
Aishwarya VijayVisit Profile
I’m a former banking and finance professional with 6 years of corporate experience, now a certified educator working at PlanetSpark. After completing my ECCEd and teaching coding at WhiteHat Jr for 2.5 years, I transitioned fully into teaching to build a healthier work–life balance and be more present for my son—while doing work I genuinely love.

Stop with a Dot! Learning Periods for Kindergarten 

This Kindergarten worksheet introduces early learners to the period (full stop)—one of the most important punctuation marks used to end telling sentences. Children learn that when we make a statement, share information, or tell something simple, we end the sentence with a period. Through fun and simple examples, this worksheet helps young learners identify correct endings and practise placing periods in their own writing. 

The worksheet includes MCQs, True/False checks, fill-in exercises, rewriting practice, and a short passage where children add periods to complete a story. 

Why Learning Periods Matters? 

Understanding periods helps children: 
1. Recognize when a sentence ends. 
2. Read with natural pauses and clear meaning. 
3. Write simple, complete sentences confidently. 
4. Build strong early grammar and reading foundations. 

What’s Inside This Worksheet? 

This worksheet includes five beginner-friendly activities: 

🧠 Exercise 1 – Choose the Correct Ending 
Children select which sentence ends correctly with a period. 

✔️ Exercise 2 – True or False 
Learners decide if the sentence uses periods correctly. 

✏️ Exercise 3 – Add the Missing Periods 
Students add full stops to complete simple sentences. 

📝 Exercise 4 – Rewrite with Periods 
Kids rewrite each sentence neatly with a period at the end. 

📖 Exercise 5 – Passage Editing 
A sweet morning routine story where children add missing periods. 

ANSWER KEY 

Exercise 1 – Choose the Correct Sentence 
1. a 
2. c 
3. b 
4. a 
5. c 
6. b 
7. a 
8. c 
9. b 
10. a 

Exercise 2 – True or False 
1. True 
2. True 
3. False 
4. False 
5. True 
6. False 
7. True 
8. True 
9. False 
10. True 

Exercise 3 – Add the Periods 
1. The cow eats grass. 
2. The tray is heavy. 
3. The ball rolls away. 
4. The girl claps softly. 
5. The road is long. 
6. The pot boils fast. 
7. He sits on mat. 
8. The lamp glows bright. 
9. The bag is red. 
10. The kite goes up. 

Exercise 4 – Rewrite with Periods 
1. The cup is on table. 
2. The dog sits by gate. 
3. We play in garden. 
4. The mat lies near bed. 
5. The hen walks slowly. 
6. Asha drinks warm milk. 
7. The leaf drops down. 
8. The room feels cool. 
9. The pen is on desk. 
10. The bus waits outside. 

Exercise 5 – Passage Editing (Correct Periods Added) 
Riya wakes up early in the morning and smiles when she sees the bright sun outside her window. 
She slowly gets ready for school and packs her little red bag with her books, her tiffin box, and her favourite blue pencil. 
After eating her breakfast, she walks with Papa to the school gate where she meets her best friend Meera. 
They both hold hands and walk to their classroom, talking about the story they heard yesterday. 
In class, the teacher shows them colourful pictures and reads a new story about a big friendly elephant. 
Riya listens carefully and draws the elephant in her notebook while Meera colours hers with yellow and grey crayons. 
During playtime, the children run around the playground, slide down the slide, and laugh happily together. 
When the bell rings, they pack their bags, say goodbye to the teacher, and walk out slowly to meet their parents. 

Help your child become a confident early writer by mastering periods—the very first punctuation mark they’ll use! 

🔖Book a free trial! 

Frequently Asked Questions

A period shows where a sentence ends, helping early learners understand complete thoughts in simple English.

Encourage kids to read aloud and pause at the end of each idea, reinforcing the use of a period.

Young learners often write in a flow, so practicing short, clear sentences helps them remember ending punctuation.