Build focus
Matching, mazes and visual puzzles invite children to slow down, notice details and finish a task.
Ages 2–7 • Print at home • Learn through play
Give your child a fresh screen-free activity every day with 14,000+ printable worksheets for tracing, writing, colouring, drawing, paper cutting, origami, puzzles, flashcards, reading, kindergarten maths and much more.
Play • Practise • Progress
Everything arranged section by section
Fourteen thousand resources sound overwhelming only when they are disorganised. Your Ultrassets bundle uses clearly labelled, topic-wise sections—from worksheets and paper activities to flashcards, planners and reading resources—with files arranged alphabetically inside each section for quick browsing.
Small activities. Big little wins.
Designed to help parents add meaningful, low-prep learning to the day — without another app, subscription or hunt for ideas.
Matching, mazes and visual puzzles invite children to slow down, notice details and finish a task.
Tracing, lines and shapes support hand control before children move into confident handwriting.
Make letters, numbers, counting, patterns, words and early maths easier to revisit at home.
Simple, inviting tasks help children practise choosing, thinking and working through problems.
More than keeping little hands busy
Young children learn through repeated, active experiences. The right paper-and-pencil activities can exercise psychomotor, cognitive, language and early academic skills together—especially when a parent joins in with encouragement and conversation.
Tracing, colouring and drawing practise controlled finger and hand movements—the foundations used for pencil grip, line control and later handwriting.
Following paths, copying forms and staying within boundaries ask the eyes and hands to work together with increasing accuracy.
Mazes, matching and step-by-step tasks give children short, achievable opportunities to stay focused, follow a rule and complete what they started.
Remembering an instruction, holding a pattern in mind and matching related items exercise the ability to retain and use information for a task.
Puzzles, sequences and “find the way” activities invite children to test ideas, notice mistakes, change approach and try again.
Spot-the-difference, shapes and patterns practise noticing size, direction, position and detail—useful when distinguishing letters and numbers.
Letters, sounds, picture-word matching and sight words build familiarity with print while parent-child talk adds meaning and vocabulary.
Counting objects, comparing quantities and continuing patterns help make numbers concrete before more formal maths begins.
Varied puzzles and classification activities encourage children to switch rules, consider another possibility and see more than one solution.
Open-ended drawing and colouring let children make choices, experiment visually and communicate ideas that may be difficult to put into words.
Finishing a manageable page creates a visible win. Gentle praise for effort can help children become more willing to attempt the next challenge.
Talking about pictures, taking turns and celebrating progress transforms a worksheet into shared learning time—not solitary busywork.
Evidence-informed, promise-safe: Research connects visual–motor integration with handwriting, and playful learning with cognitive, physical, language, social and emotional development. These worksheets provide opportunities to practise relevant skills; they do not diagnose, treat or guarantee developmental outcomes.
For the healthiest development, combine worksheets with conversation, stories, sleep, nutritious food, outdoor movement, free play and responsive time with caring adults.
Handwriting & visual–motor research · Harvard executive-function guide · UNICEF on learning through playThe cost of “just one more video”
The concern is not that every screen is harmful. It is that long, frequent or poorly timed use can replace sleep, movement, conversation, hands-on play and the real-world practice young children need.
Evening media use and devices in the bedroom are associated with shorter sleep in young children. Less sleep can leave children tired and make attention harder the next day.
Every long stretch sitting with a device is time not spent running, climbing, exploring or practising whole-body movement. WHO guidance prioritises active play and limits sedentary screen time for under-fives.
Long, unbroken viewing can contribute to eye fatigue, temporary blurry vision, dryness and headaches. Children may become absorbed enough to ignore early discomfort.
For young children, language grows through responsive back-and-forth interaction. Passive viewing can crowd out talking, storytelling, questions and shared attention with caregivers.
Young children need to touch, draw, manipulate, make choices and solve real problems. A swipe or autoplay feed cannot fully replace physical exploration and social play.
Early childhood is when family routines take shape. If a phone becomes the automatic answer to boredom, meals or fussiness, replacing that pattern later may become much harder.
Start with one simple swap: replace 15 minutes of passive scrolling with a page your child can trace, solve, colour and proudly show you.
Health context: WHO guidelines for under-fives · American Academy of Pediatrics · AAP guidance on eye comfort. Associations do not prove that screens alone cause an outcome.
Peek inside the pack
Choose a skill or resource type, pick a file and print. From five-minute tracing practice and kindergarten maths to flashcards, origami, journals and reading activities, the bundle keeps ideas within reach.
One practical learning library
Keep the pages that suit your child right now and return to new skills as they grow.
No complicated setup
All you need is a curious child, a printer and a few minutes together.
Open the relevant section, browse its alphabetically arranged digital files and select an activity suited to your child’s interest or current skill.
Use standard A4 paper. Print in full colour or select grayscale when you want to save colour ink.
Spend 10–15 minutes, notice the effort and revisit favourites whenever more practice would help.
A calmer activity option
The complete digital bundle
Everything included
Secure purchase • Download links sent instantly by Email & WhatsApp after payment • Lifetime access
Made for real family life
After payment, your downloadable asset links are sent instantly by Email and WhatsApp.
Use A4 paper and choose colour or black-and-white printing.
Get order information and purchased asset links on WhatsApp at +91 76000 12128, or Email support@ultrassets.com.
Good questions
The activities are designed broadly for children aged 2–7. Every child develops differently, so choose pages based on your child’s present ability and interest rather than age alone.
No. This is a digital collection of direct PDF files, divided into clearly labelled sections and arranged alphabetically by file name for easy browsing. Nothing is shipped. You will receive download access after your purchase.
The organised collection includes paper activities, cutting, origami, puzzles, shapes, time, words, bedtime stories, charts, colouring and drawing worksheets, flashcards, journals, kindergarten numbers and maths, planners, playhouse posters, reading comprehension, spelling, tracing, writing worksheets and selected child-development eBooks.
Yes. Most activities remain useful in grayscale, and colouring pages are naturally ideal for black-and-white printing.
Standard A4 paper works well. Your printer’s “fit to page” option can help scale pages neatly if needed.
Yes. Your lifetime access lets you return to the files and reprint activities for personal family use whenever needed.
After successful payment, your downloadable asset links are sent instantly to the Email address and WhatsApp number provided during checkout. Your purchase includes lifetime access.
Email support@ultrassets.com or contact our 24×7 WhatsApp assistance at +91 76000 12128 for order information and purchased asset links.
No special design skills are required. A modern PDF reader, a device to download the files and access to a printer are enough.
Ready for less prep and more play?
Download once. Print what your child loves. Come back whenever they're ready for more.