Colouring, Worksheets and Homework

Colouring, worksheets, and homework are often a child’s first steps toward learning to write and building confidence in early education.

Colouring is often a child’s first step towards learning to write. It also build stronger muscles to hold things like pens or pencils for Worksheets.

ABC’s and Numbers are easy if you trace and Important words like Names, Places, and things we like or don’t Like. This is what develops critical thinking skills to do homework.

When a child is still learning to hold a pencil, homework in subjects like math or science becomes more than just learning—it becomes a physical challenge. While some children focus on solving questions, others are still working out how to form numbers like 9.

In writing, this can be even more noticeable. A child full of ideas may suddenly become quiet when asked to write. Their page stays blank not because they don’t have answers, but because getting those thoughts onto paper is still a struggle.

TFS is about giving every child a Voice starting with Colouring.

Free Colouring pages

We will continue adding free coloring pages as often as possible.

If you have a specific idea in mind that you don’t see here, AI tools can be a helpful way for parents to create custom coloring pages at home. You can try simple prompts like:

“Create a coloring page of ______ for a child aged ______.”

We recommend searching for your idea first or using trusted tools to explore creative options.

While Tallen Families Stories must follow strict copyright and publishing guidelines, families creating content for personal use have more flexibility. Always be mindful of how and where content is shared.

After you Color the pages if you have any AI add background or have them do silly things. See Dragons and Fantasy below for Earth Sky Dragons Result.

Animals and Insects

Here you will find animals from Little John stories, insects and Farm animals doing human roles. We aim to teach that:

DENI Rocks!

Deni Rocks is like a fun rock club where Deni my wife and I collect, and learn about cool rocks together! using Social Media post on Facebook and Youtube we post our favourite finds. TFS then turn the rocks into colouring pages. Why Deni likes to collect rocks?

  • to connect with nature
  • It’s quiet, relaxing, and helps us feel calm after big, busy times.
  • We don’t just keep the rocks we share them, trade them, or tell stories about them.

Dragons and Fantasy Cryptids

🐉 Welcome to the Dragon Section

Welcome to the Dragon section From Mr. Talon to community inspired fantasy friends.

Have you ever wondered why some dragons don’t have wings in Tallen Families Stories?

The idea of a “dragon” is very old. Different cultures around the world have their own versions, and they don’t all look the same. Some dragons fly with wings, while others are long, powerful, and move like serpents through water, sky, or land.


🌍 Dragons Around the World

The word dragon has changed over time and sounds different across languages and cultures. Our song “Jpop, Kpop, Dragon Pop” plays with this idea and celebrates how stories travel around the world.

“Dragons got names from every old land,
Before dinos were found deep beneath the sand.”

In the song, Mr. Talon explores how the word “dragon” appears in different cultures:

  • 竜 (Ryū) → traditional/native word for dragon
  • ドラゴン (Doragon) → modern Japanese (borrowed from English “dragon”)
  • 용 (Yong) → traditional/native Korean word for dragon
  • 드래곤 (Deuraegon) → modern Korean word (borrowed from English “dragon”)

Even though the words sound different, they all connect back to the same idea. a dragon.


💡 Why This Matters

Exploring dragons from different cultures helps children:

  • understand that stories change across the world
  • learn that words and meanings evolve
  • build curiosity about history, language, and imagination

“A dragon today is a Cryptid creature told in stories in many voices.”


Tracing

The file below is a great way to teach children to write and get familiar with common words. We recommend parents and teachers create custom pages using the child’s name and important things like phone numbers or likes and dislikes. Asking what would you like to learn to spell or write helps children feel in control.

After tracing, letter recognition and sentence structure can be explored to help children build stronger reading and writing skills. Activities such as matching uppercase and lowercase letters, filling in missing letters, and completing simple sentences allow learners to connect sounds, symbols, and meaning in a fun and engaging way. As seen throughout this workbook, students move from identifying letters to using them in words and short sentences, helping them gain confidence and develop early literacy skills step by step

Learning vocabulary for beginners

his worksheet collection supports early learners in building strong vocabulary, spelling, and grammar skills through fun and engaging activities. Children practice choosing the correct word in sentences, filling in missing letters, and answering simple grammar questions that introduce nouns, verbs, adjectives, and sentence structure. The activities are designed to be read aloud or guided by parents and teachers, making them accessible for younger learners while encouraging independent thinking and confidence. As shown throughout the workbook, students move from recognizing familiar words to using them correctly in context, helping them develop essential language skills step by step

Math for all ages

In this section, we explore how families and educators can use AI to quickly create age-appropriate math worksheets tailored to each child’s learning level. By using simple prompts, parents can generate addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division questions with adjustable difficulty from basic numbers under 10 to more advanced Grade 7 problems with mixed operations. As shown throughout this guide, AI can produce structured worksheets, themed story problems, and even full 100-question practice pages in seconds, helping make math more accessible, engaging, and customizable for every learner

Punctuation Police

The following activity introduces sentences without proper punctuation to help students practice correcting and improving their writing. Once basic sentence structure is understood, students are ready to learn how to use punctuation marks such as periods, question marks, and exclamation points, along with proper capitalization. Through rewriting and editing sentences, learners begin to understand how punctuation adds meaning, clarity, and expression to writing, turning simple word strings into complete and effective sentences

Past, present, and future tense

The number one issue young writers face is understanding past, present, and future tense. We developed questions that help children learn how recognize that verbs change depending on when an action happens. Whether it already happened (past), is happening now (present), or will happen later (future). By practicing with familiar, everyday sentences, students build confidence in identifying correct verb forms and develop a stronger understanding of sentence structure and meaning.