Weather Worksheets

About These 15 Worksheets

Weather can be wild, wonderful, and sometimes just plain confusing-and these worksheets help kids make sense of it all. From foggy mornings to hurricane-force winds, the collection covers everything in bite-sized, hands-on activities. Some pages are artsy, like drawing and matching, while others lean into science, like tracking real conditions or breaking down storm systems. The variety makes it easy for learners to connect what they see outside their window with the concepts they study in class.

These sheets are designed to spark curiosity while teaching practical vocabulary and observation skills. By describing, labeling, and charting, students become little weather reporters in their own right. Each worksheet builds confidence in recognizing patterns and using precise words to talk about what’s happening in the sky. It’s practice that feels relevant and even a little exciting, especially when a storm rolls through.

And beyond vocabulary drills, these worksheets tie directly into real life. Understanding how droughts affect communities, why fog blankets a valley, or how monsoons shape cultures gives kids a sense of how weather connects us all. By blending science, geography, and everyday experience, the collection shows that weather isn’t just small talk-it’s one of the biggest forces shaping our world.

Have a Look Inside Each Worksheet

Freezing Rain, Hail, and Sleet
Students learn about different forms of frozen precipitation-freezing rain, hail, and sleet-by identifying and describing each type. They might compare how they form and recognize them in images or descriptions. It’s a crisp, weather-science exploration that makes the different ice-related phenomena feel clear and tangible. This activity strengthens understanding of precipitation types in a fun, observational way.

Blizzards
Learners investigate what makes a blizzard distinct-factors like wind speed, snow accumulation, and visibility. They may examine diagrams or scenarios to identify key characteristics. This deepens their grasp of extreme snow events while building critical thinking. It’s a cool opportunity to understand severe winter storms.

Droughts
Students explore prolonged dry periods, examining what causes droughts and their effects on the environment and communities. They might match descriptions to drought stages or sequence drought-development scenarios. This promotes understanding of climate variability and resource challenges. It’s a timely way to link environmental awareness with real-world consequences.

Monsoons
Kids study seasonal wind and rainfall patterns, learning how monsoons develop and influence different regions. Activities may include matching wind directions, precipitation maps, or describing seasonal cycles. This worksheet connects geography, climate, and cultural impacts of weather patterns. It’s a captivating way to bring global weather dynamics to life.

Hurricanes, Cyclones, and Typhoons
Students compare these powerful storms-understanding that they’re essentially the same phenomenon called different names in different parts of the world. They might label parts of a storm, chart strength differences, or match regions with local storm names. This teaches how terminology, geography, and intensity all play a role in weather knowledge. A whirlwind tour of the world’s most intense storms!

How Fog Forms
Learners explore the basics of how fog develops-focusing on humidity, temperature differences, and air saturation. They may match the right conditions to fog formation steps or diagram the process. It brings a tactile, everyday weather phenomenon into clear view. It’s perfect for sparking curiosity about the misty mornings we often take for granted.

Picture Perfect
This creative worksheet invites students to illustrate various weather conditions-sunny, rainy, cloudy, snowy-and label them accurately. It combines drawing with vocabulary recognition, boosting both art and weather literacy. Seeing weather conditions come to life on paper helps reinforce understanding. A picture-based introduction to basic weather types.

Pasting Boxes
Students cut and paste images or words into boxes labeled by weather type-like sunny, windy, snowy, and stormy. This hands-on activity makes sorting weather cues tactile and clear. It’s perfect for early learners, integrating fine motor skills with concept recognition. A fun, crafty way to reinforce weather vocabulary.

What’s the Weather?
Learners match descriptions or icons to the correct weather term (sunny, windy, rainy, etc.)-perhaps completing charts or grids. This builds basic reading and observational skills with everyday scenarios. It’s a straightforward quiz that reinforces weather awareness through pattern recognition. Ideal for quick checks of concept understanding.

Matching
Students pair weather-related terms with the correct images or descriptions-like pairing “snowy” with a snowflake or “windy” with a breeze icon. This strengthens associations between language and visuals. It’s simple but effective reinforcement of weather vocabulary. Great for visual learners and young weather watchers.

What It Is Like
Kids read short passages describing weather conditions and must choose the matching term or draw the condition described. This blends reading comprehension with weather concept recognition. It helps students connect descriptive language to actual weather scenarios. A thoughtful way to deepen understanding through context.

Describe the Weather
Students practice writing sentences or phrases describing weather scenes-such as “It’s drizzling,” “The sky is overcast,” or “Winds are gusty.” It sharpens descriptive language and introduces meteorological vocabulary. Engaging both writing and observation, this activity makes learners weather-reporters for a day. A fun bridge into expressive weather literacy.

Missing Letters
Learners fill in blanks in weather-related words-like “_unny” becomes “sunny”-using context clues or picture prompts. This reinforces spelling and word recognition while still staying on theme. It’s a playful spelling puzzle tied to meteorology. A breezy way to mix literacy and weather concepts.

Draw the Weather
Students draw scenes based on written clues-like “draw a day with hail” or “illustrate a sunny afternoon.” They translate language into imagery, reinforcing understanding through visual creativity. It’s both art and applied vocabulary practice. A great way to make weather concepts both seen and felt.

Stormy Days
Learners read about stormy conditions-lightning, thunder, strong wind-and might draw or label them. They could sequence what happens during a storm or write down precautions. This blends safety, science, and descriptive vocabulary. It’s a dynamic way to explore dramatic weather events.

Today’s Weather
Students record current weather conditions-icon, temperature, perhaps wind and precipitation-for the day. Often includes space for date, location, and weather notes. It’s real-time data collection that echoes how meteorologists work. A daily log that turns observation into habit.

Monday Through Friday
Kids track weather across the school week, filling in boxes with conditions, temperatures, or symbols for each day. This builds patterns recognition and basic charting skills. It shows how weather can change over time-even in just five days. A mini-data project for a week in the classroom.

Describe Each Day
Learners write brief descriptions for each day’s weather-like “cloudy with morning drizzle” or “sunny and warm.” This deepens both observational and expressive skills. Recording narratives encourages attention to detail in both science and language. A small journal of the sky.

Windy Days
Students explore conditions that define “windy,” maybe marking a flag icon or rating wind strength. They might match terms like “breezy,” “gusty,” or “calm” to corresponding pictures or descriptions. It focuses on the movement of air-with vocabulary and awareness. A breezy, hands-on lesson on airflow around us.

What Is Weather?

Weather is what’s happening outside right now-sunshine, rain, wind, snow, or anything in between. It’s the mix of temperature, moisture, and air movement that changes from day to day (or sometimes hour to hour). Think of it as Earth’s daily mood swings, which we experience through the clothes we wear and the plans we make.

It matters because weather affects everything-what we eat, how we travel, even how we feel. Farmers need to know about rain for their crops, pilots watch for storms before flying, and we all check the forecast before packing an umbrella. Understanding weather helps us prepare and stay safe, but it also makes us more aware of how interconnected nature really is.

These worksheets give students a chance to explore weather in fun, practical ways. Drawing clouds, tracking the week’s temperatures, or learning how hurricanes form makes the science of the sky more relatable. Over time, kids don’t just memorize terms-they become curious observers of the world above them, ready to talk about weather with confidence (and maybe a little less small talk, too).