Class KG Reading Passage: Colors Around Us

Class KG Reading Passage: Colors Around Us
Class KG Reading Passage: Colors Around Us

Class KG Reading Passage: Colors Around Us

KGEnglishEnglish GrammarFree DownloadPDF
Sejal Jain
Sejal JainVisit Profile
An English educator with 10+ years of experience, I hold a Master’s in English Literature and a TESOL certification. My diverse professional background allows me to bring fresh perspective, strong communication, and thoughtful intention to every aspect of my work in education.

Bright World: Reading Passage “Colors Around Us” for Class KG 

This Kindergarten worksheet introduces children to the colorful world they see daily. The passage describes how the sky is blue, the sun is yellow, grass and leaves are green, roses can be red, milk is white and clean, oranges are orange and sweet, clouds are grey on rainy days, and blackboards are used in class. It shows that colors make our world bright and happy.  

Why Reading Passages Matter in Grammar? 

Reading passages connect observation with learning. This worksheet helps children:  
1. Recall colours linked to familiar objects.  
2. Build vocabulary with words like “grey,” “bright,” and “clean.”  
3. Notice the world around them with detail.  
4. Strengthen comprehension with fact-based questions.  

What’s Inside This Worksheet?  

The worksheet features a short passage and 10 factual comprehension questions:  

🧠 Reading Passage  
A child-friendly description of colors seen in the sky, sun, plants, flowers, fruits, clouds, and classroom.  

✏️ Exercise – Multiple Choice Questions  
Children answer what colour the sky, grass, roses, milk, and oranges are, what clouds look like, and what colors make the world feel like.  

✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)  

1. D  
2. B  
3. C  
4. A  
5. B  
6. C  
7. A  
8. A  
9. C  
10. D  

Make reading bright and fun with this KG passage on colors. A perfect way to link everyday observations with comprehension skills!  
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Frequently Asked Questions

Use expression, gestures, and pause to let them guess what comes next.

Yes, children recall story details while answering the questions.

It introduces sentence flow and word use naturally.