New customer?

A-D - Activities and Games

Explore the well-loved story by Lewis Carroll with these Alice in Wonderland Printable Activity Sheets. This collection includes teacher-created word searches, display materials, colouring sheets and maze worksheets perfect for KS1.

Alice in Wonderland Printable Activity Sheets

This lovely collection of Alice in Wonderland Printable Activity Sheets has been designed to help elevate your lessons and let children have fun as they learn about the well-loved story.

There are some fantastically illustrated display materials such as these playing cards and this word mat that will add some magic to your classroom walls.

Create some collective calm in the classroom with some group colouring. This selection of colouring sheets includes a rose, teacups and even Alice herself.

You can support your class’s spelling with this word search. They have to topic-specific find words such as caterpillar, mad hatter and queen.

If you’d like to work on your children’s fine motor skills while you’re reading Alice in Wonderland, we think you’ll like these cutting skills worksheets. There are also dot-to-dots and a set of differentiated maze worksheets to help with pencil control.

Teacher-Created Resources Designed to Save You Time

We’re here to provide trusted content that helps engage young learners and inspires great teaching. All the Alice in Wonderland Printable Activity Sheets in this category have been created by experienced educators to help those who teach get the most from their lessons on the well-loved story.

We understand printing lots of resources for your children can bump up your printing costs, so make sure you check for the eco-friendly, ink-saving versions. They go a little way to keeping your printing costs as low as possible - plus they’re kinder to the environment too!

Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

And what is the use of a book, thought Alice, without pictures or conversation?

Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland was written in 1865 by Lewis Carroll. It tells of a young girl named Alice, who falls through a rabbit hole into a fantasy world populated by peculiar, anthropomorphic creatures (animals who act like humans).

People believe that it is one of the best examples of the literary nonsense genre because it plays with logic, meaning it appeals to adults as well as children.

Themes explored in Alice in Wonderland include language, logic, friendship and growing up.

After reading the story with your class consider these questions for some classroom discussions:

  • Why do you think Alice feels tired if she isn’t actually doing anything?
  • Do you agree that a book with no pictures is useless?
  • If Alice had stopped to think about following the White Rabbit, do you think she would have still gone?
  • What do you think the White Rabbit was rushing to get to?
  • Do you think Alice was scared at all?

The above video may be from a third-party source. We accept no responsibility for any videos from third-party sources. Please let us know if the video is no longer working.

Create your FREE account now!

Free Account Includes:
  • Thousands of FREE teaching resources to download
  • Pick your own FREE resource every week with our newsletter
  • Suggest a Resource! You want it? We'll make it
  • 24/7 customer support (with real people!)
Sign Up Now to Download
Are you sure you want to sign out?
Keep me signed in Sign Out