Class KG Short Stories: The Clever Fox

Class KG Short Stories: The Clever Fox
Class KG Short Stories: The Clever Fox

Class KG Short Stories: The Clever Fox

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.

Tricky Plans: Short Stories “The Clever Fox” for Class KG  

This Kindergarten worksheet tells the story of a sly fox who tricks a crow. The crow has a piece of bread, and the fox flatters it by praising its voice. When the crow opens its beak to sing, the bread falls down, and the fox quickly eats it. The crow feels sad while the fox feels glad. The story teaches children to be careful of false praise.  

Why Short Stories Matter in Grammar?  

Short Stories build focus and moral learning. This worksheet helps children:  
1. Recall short story events clearly.  
2. Understand the cause-and-effect of actions.  
3. Build vocabulary with simple story words.  
4. Learn life lessons through fables.  

What’s Inside This Worksheet? 

This worksheet includes a short passage and 10 multiple-choice comprehension questions:  

🧠 Reading Passage  
A story of a fox tricking a crow into dropping its bread by using sweet words.  

✏️ Exercise – Multiple Choice Questions  
Children answer who saw the crow, what it held, what the fox wanted, what the crow did, how the story ended, and what lesson it taught.  

✅ Answer Key (For Parents & Educators)  

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

Introduce your child to the world of fables with this fox-and-crow KG comprehension worksheet. Fun, thoughtful, and full of learning!  
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Frequently Asked Questions

They introduce reading habits, text awareness, and early grammar exposure.

Pictures reduce difficulty, making reading fun and less intimidating.

Yes, parents can retell the story orally, then let the child try the worksheet.