1st Grade Sequencing Worksheets
Looking for free, printable sequencing worksheets for your 1st Grade class? Download the sample PDF below or generate unlimited custom worksheets on any topic.
Why teachers love these worksheets:
- Aligned to Common Core Standards
- Includes Multiple Choice Questions
- Includes Answer Keys
- Download as Printable PDF
Making a Sandwich
1st Grade • Sequencing
First, get bread. Next, put jelly on it. Then, put peanut butter on it. Last, eat it!
[...Full passage continues in generated version...]
Comprehension Check
1. What do you do first?
Key Concepts
Frequently Asked Questions
What should 1st Grade students know about sequencing?
1st Grade students should be able to order events chronologically. with grade-appropriate texts. Our worksheets are specifically designed for 1st Grade reading levels with vocabulary and passage complexity matched to this grade.
What is sequencing in reading comprehension?
Sequencing is the skill of identifying and understanding the order of events in a text. Students learn to recognize what happened first, next, then, and last using transition words and context clues.
What words help identify sequence in a passage?
Sequence signal words include: first, next, then, after, before, finally, last, later, meanwhile, during, following, subsequently, and specific time references like dates or times of day.
How do I teach sequencing to kindergarten and 1st grade?
Start with 3-step sequences using pictures. Use daily routines (morning routine, making a sandwich). Read predictable books and retell events. Create simple timelines with drawings before moving to text-based activities.
Why is sequencing important for reading comprehension?
Sequencing helps students understand story structure, follow procedures, comprehend cause-effect relationships, and retell what they read. It's foundational for summarizing and understanding complex texts.
Are these sequencing worksheets differentiated by grade level?
Yes, our worksheets are differentiated for grades 1-5. Lower grades use shorter texts with explicit signal words. Upper grades feature longer passages where sequence must be inferred from context.