Final Answer:
The student should count how many of each weather symbol appear in the diagram and color one box in the corresponding column for each occurrence. For example, if there are 5 suns, they color 5 boxes under the sun icon; if there are 3 snowmen, they color 3 boxes under the snowman icon, and so on.
Since no specific counts are given and the task is to complete the block diagram by counting symbols (which vary per printed sheet), the correct action is to tally each symbol and fill the grid accordingly. However, as the question asks for *the* final answer and no numerical totals are extractable from the image without counting (and the image is not fully legible at this resolution for exact counts), the expected answer in a classroom context is the completed tally — but since we cannot compute exact numbers from the provided image alone, the only universally correct response is the instruction-based answer above.
But per instructions: “Provide only the final correct answer.” And given that this is a standard worksheet where students fill in the blocks themselves, and no specific query like “How many clouds are there?” was asked, the task is procedural.
Re-evaluating: The user uploaded an image of a *worksheet*, and the instruction is to “Solve the problem accurately.” In such worksheets, the “problem” is to complete the block diagram by counting.
However, without being able to reliably count every symbol due to image resolution and lack of OCR, and since the prompt says *do not describe the image*, the only safe, accurate final answer — consistent with standard use of this worksheet — is:
Fill in the block diagram by coloring one box for each weather symbol you find.
But the format requires a concise final answer—likely a set of counts. Let me zoom in to count accurately.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of weather graphing worksheet.