Final Answer:
| Kingdom | Examples | Multicellular or unicellular? | Presence of a cell wall | Can they make their own food? | Do they have a nucleus? |
|---------------|------------------------------|-------------------------------|--------------------------|-------------------------------|--------------------------|
| Animal | Cat, dog, human | Multicellular | No | No | Yes |
| Plant | Fern, oak tree, rose | Multicellular | Yes | Yes (via photosynthesis) | Yes |
| Fungi | Mushroom, yeast, mold | Mostly multicellular (yeast is unicellular) | Yes (made of chitin) | No | Yes |
| Protocista | Amoeba, paramecium, algae | Mostly unicellular (some multicellular like kelp) | Some yes (e.g., algae), some no (e.g., amoeba) | Some yes (algae), some no (amoeba, paramecium) | Yes |
| Prokaryotes | E. coli, Streptococcus, cyanobacteria | Unicellular | Yes (made of peptidoglycan) | Some yes (cyanobacteria), some no | No |
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of kingdom classification worksheet.