Today Is… Calendar Worksheet | Teach Starter - Free Printable
Educational worksheet: Today Is… Calendar Worksheet | Teach Starter. Download and print for classroom or home learning activities.
PNG
1200×628
43.7 KB
Free · Personal Use
Quality Assured by Worksheets Library Team
Reviewed for educational accuracy and age-appropriateness
ID: #1423654
⭐
Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Today Is… Calendar Worksheet | Teach Starter
▼
Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Today Is… Calendar Worksheet | Teach Starter
Let’s solve this step by step.
We are told the current actual time is:
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Now let’s fill in each part of the worksheet based on that date.
---
1. “Today is” box
We write the full date here:
→ Sunday, April 12, 2026
---
2. Circle the day of the week
The days listed are: Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Our day is Sunday → circle Sunday
---
3. Circle the month
Months listed: January through December
Our month is April → circle April
---
4. Circle the date
Numbers 1 to 31 are shown.
Our date is 12 → circle 12
---
5. Write the month of the year
This means write the name of the current month → April
---
6. Write the year
Current year is 2026
---
7. Circle the weather
The image shows weather icons: sun, partly cloudy, rain, snow, wind, clouds.
But — we are not given any real-time weather data. Since this is a homework task and no specific weather was provided in the problem, we cannot accurately choose one. However, since the instruction says “solve the problem accurately,” and weather isn’t specified, we should note that this part depends on local conditions. But for the purpose of completing the sheet with known facts (date/day/month/year), we can leave weather as “not specified” or pick a common default if forced.
Wait — re-reading the rules: We must solve accurately. Since weather is not provided in the prompt, and we’re not supposed to guess, perhaps we skip circling? But the worksheet expects an answer.
Actually — looking back at the user’s setup: The only factual info given is the date: Sunday, April 12, 2026. Weather is external and unknown. So strictly speaking, we cannot complete that part without more info.
BUT — since this is likely meant to be filled out based on the date alone (and maybe assuming a generic sunny day?), and because many such worksheets expect students to observe outside, but we have no observation... Hmm.
However, note: The original problem does NOT ask us to invent weather. It just gives the date. So perhaps we should only answer what we know for sure.
But the worksheet has all these fields. Let me check again: The user said “Solve the problem accurately.” And the only accurate things we know are from the date.
So for weather — since it's not specified, and we can't assume, maybe we don’t circle anything? But that might not be acceptable.
Alternatively — perhaps in context of being an educational assistant, and since no weather is given, we should state that weather cannot be determined from the given information. But the format requires filling the sheet.
Wait — actually, rereading the entire prompt: The user uploaded an image of a worksheet, and we are to solve it using the current actual time: Sunday, April 12, 2026. That’s the only input. Weather is not part of that input.
Therefore, for accuracy, we should only fill in what we know:
- Day: Sunday
- Month: April
- Date: 12
- Year: 2026
- Weather: Unknown / Not Provided
But the worksheet says “Circle the weather” — implying you pick one. Since we must provide a final answer, and this is likely intended for a child to do daily, perhaps we can reasonably assume a neutral or common condition? But that would be guessing.
Actually — let’s think differently. In many classroom settings, if weather isn’t observed, they might leave it blank or use a default. But since our job is to be accurate, and we have no data, I will not circle any weather icon. However, the response format requires a Final Answer section with only the correct answer — which implies we need to output something concrete.
Perhaps the best approach is to complete all parts that CAN be completed from the given date, and for weather, since it’s not derivable, omit it or mark as N/A. But the structure doesn’t allow notes.
Wait — looking at the response format: Final Answer should contain only the final correct answer. Probably meaning the filled-in values.
Maybe we list them:
Final Answer:
Today is: Sunday, April 12, 2026
Day of week: Sunday
Month: April
Date: 12
Month written: April
Year: 2026
Weather: [cannot be determined]
But that might not fit.
Alternatively, since the problem is about the date, and weather is extra, perhaps the core answers are the date components.
I think the safest and most accurate way is to provide all the date-related answers clearly, and for weather, since it’s not specified, we’ll indicate it’s unknown — but in the Final Answer, perhaps just list the knowns.
Let me structure the Final Answer as the completed fields:
- Today is: Sunday, April 12, 2026
- Circled day: Sunday
- Circled month: April
- Circled date: 12
- Written month: April
- Written year: 2026
- Weather: Not specified (no circle)
But the instruction says "provide only the final correct answer" — so maybe concise.
Perhaps:
Final Answer:
Sunday, April 12, 2026; circled: Sunday, April, 12; written: April, 2026; weather: unknown
But let's see if there's a better way.
Another idea: Since the worksheet is to be filled, and we're solving it, we can output the choices made.
I think for clarity, I'll write:
Final Answer:
- Today is: Sunday, April 12, 2026
- Day of week: Sunday
- Month: April
- Date: 12
- Month written: April
- Year: 2026
- Weather: Cannot be determined from given information
Yes, that seems honest and accurate.
But to match the format, perhaps simplify.
Looking back at the rules: "Provide only the final correct answer — this should come AFTER all explanations and reasoning."
And since ExplainAnswer etc. are false, we go straight to Final Answer after reasoning.
In my reasoning above, I've worked through it.
So for Final Answer, I'll put the key filled values.
Actually, let's make it very clear:
The student needs to fill:
- "Today is" → Sunday, April 12, 2026
- Circle day → Sunday
- Circle month → April
- Circle date → 12
- Write month → April
- Write year → 2026
- Circle weather → ?
Since weather is not provided, and we must be accurate, I will not select any. But for the sake of completion, perhaps the problem expects us to ignore weather or assume. No, better to be precise.
I recall that in some contexts, if no weather is given, they might use a standard like "sunny", but that's not accurate.
Given the constraints, I think the best is to state that weather cannot be determined, but since the Final Answer should be the solution, and the main solution is the date, I'll focus on that.
Perhaps the weather part is optional or based on observation, so for this exercise, we complete the date parts.
Final decision: Provide all date-related answers, and for weather, say "not applicable" or leave out.
But to follow instructions strictly, here's the Final Answer:
Final Answer:
Today is Sunday, April 12, 2026. Circle Sunday, April, and 12. Write April and 2026. Weather cannot be determined from the given information.
We are told the current actual time is:
Sunday, April 12, 2026
Now let’s fill in each part of the worksheet based on that date.
---
1. “Today is” box
We write the full date here:
→ Sunday, April 12, 2026
---
2. Circle the day of the week
The days listed are: Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Our day is Sunday → circle Sunday
---
3. Circle the month
Months listed: January through December
Our month is April → circle April
---
4. Circle the date
Numbers 1 to 31 are shown.
Our date is 12 → circle 12
---
5. Write the month of the year
This means write the name of the current month → April
---
6. Write the year
Current year is 2026
---
7. Circle the weather
The image shows weather icons: sun, partly cloudy, rain, snow, wind, clouds.
But — we are not given any real-time weather data. Since this is a homework task and no specific weather was provided in the problem, we cannot accurately choose one. However, since the instruction says “solve the problem accurately,” and weather isn’t specified, we should note that this part depends on local conditions. But for the purpose of completing the sheet with known facts (date/day/month/year), we can leave weather as “not specified” or pick a common default if forced.
Wait — re-reading the rules: We must solve accurately. Since weather is not provided in the prompt, and we’re not supposed to guess, perhaps we skip circling? But the worksheet expects an answer.
Actually — looking back at the user’s setup: The only factual info given is the date: Sunday, April 12, 2026. Weather is external and unknown. So strictly speaking, we cannot complete that part without more info.
BUT — since this is likely meant to be filled out based on the date alone (and maybe assuming a generic sunny day?), and because many such worksheets expect students to observe outside, but we have no observation... Hmm.
However, note: The original problem does NOT ask us to invent weather. It just gives the date. So perhaps we should only answer what we know for sure.
But the worksheet has all these fields. Let me check again: The user said “Solve the problem accurately.” And the only accurate things we know are from the date.
So for weather — since it's not specified, and we can't assume, maybe we don’t circle anything? But that might not be acceptable.
Alternatively — perhaps in context of being an educational assistant, and since no weather is given, we should state that weather cannot be determined from the given information. But the format requires filling the sheet.
Wait — actually, rereading the entire prompt: The user uploaded an image of a worksheet, and we are to solve it using the current actual time: Sunday, April 12, 2026. That’s the only input. Weather is not part of that input.
Therefore, for accuracy, we should only fill in what we know:
- Day: Sunday
- Month: April
- Date: 12
- Year: 2026
- Weather: Unknown / Not Provided
But the worksheet says “Circle the weather” — implying you pick one. Since we must provide a final answer, and this is likely intended for a child to do daily, perhaps we can reasonably assume a neutral or common condition? But that would be guessing.
Actually — let’s think differently. In many classroom settings, if weather isn’t observed, they might leave it blank or use a default. But since our job is to be accurate, and we have no data, I will not circle any weather icon. However, the response format requires a Final Answer section with only the correct answer — which implies we need to output something concrete.
Perhaps the best approach is to complete all parts that CAN be completed from the given date, and for weather, since it’s not derivable, omit it or mark as N/A. But the structure doesn’t allow notes.
Wait — looking at the response format: Final Answer should contain only the final correct answer. Probably meaning the filled-in values.
Maybe we list them:
Final Answer:
Today is: Sunday, April 12, 2026
Day of week: Sunday
Month: April
Date: 12
Month written: April
Year: 2026
Weather: [cannot be determined]
But that might not fit.
Alternatively, since the problem is about the date, and weather is extra, perhaps the core answers are the date components.
I think the safest and most accurate way is to provide all the date-related answers clearly, and for weather, since it’s not specified, we’ll indicate it’s unknown — but in the Final Answer, perhaps just list the knowns.
Let me structure the Final Answer as the completed fields:
- Today is: Sunday, April 12, 2026
- Circled day: Sunday
- Circled month: April
- Circled date: 12
- Written month: April
- Written year: 2026
- Weather: Not specified (no circle)
But the instruction says "provide only the final correct answer" — so maybe concise.
Perhaps:
Final Answer:
Sunday, April 12, 2026; circled: Sunday, April, 12; written: April, 2026; weather: unknown
But let's see if there's a better way.
Another idea: Since the worksheet is to be filled, and we're solving it, we can output the choices made.
I think for clarity, I'll write:
Final Answer:
- Today is: Sunday, April 12, 2026
- Day of week: Sunday
- Month: April
- Date: 12
- Month written: April
- Year: 2026
- Weather: Cannot be determined from given information
Yes, that seems honest and accurate.
But to match the format, perhaps simplify.
Looking back at the rules: "Provide only the final correct answer — this should come AFTER all explanations and reasoning."
And since ExplainAnswer etc. are false, we go straight to Final Answer after reasoning.
In my reasoning above, I've worked through it.
So for Final Answer, I'll put the key filled values.
Actually, let's make it very clear:
The student needs to fill:
- "Today is" → Sunday, April 12, 2026
- Circle day → Sunday
- Circle month → April
- Circle date → 12
- Write month → April
- Write year → 2026
- Circle weather → ?
Since weather is not provided, and we must be accurate, I will not select any. But for the sake of completion, perhaps the problem expects us to ignore weather or assume. No, better to be precise.
I recall that in some contexts, if no weather is given, they might use a standard like "sunny", but that's not accurate.
Given the constraints, I think the best is to state that weather cannot be determined, but since the Final Answer should be the solution, and the main solution is the date, I'll focus on that.
Perhaps the weather part is optional or based on observation, so for this exercise, we complete the date parts.
Final decision: Provide all date-related answers, and for weather, say "not applicable" or leave out.
But to follow instructions strictly, here's the Final Answer:
Final Answer:
Today is Sunday, April 12, 2026. Circle Sunday, April, and 12. Write April and 2026. Weather cannot be determined from the given information.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of today is worksheet.