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Human Organs | Name The Organs

Original price $2.75 - Original price $2.75
Original price
$2.75
$2.75 - $2.75
Current price $2.75

Digital Download

Enjoy instant access to your Montessori printables. This is a digital product - no physical items will be shipped.

Seven internal organs wait to be labeled—heart, lungs, brain, stomach, liver, kidneys, intestines. Children ages 5-8 match word labels to organ diagrams, building anatomy vocabulary and reading skills through this hands-on labeling activity delivered as an instant PDF download.

📦 What's Included

  • 14 labeling cards (7 organ diagrams + 7 word labels)
  • 3 pages total
  • Organs included: heart, lungs, brain, stomach, liver, kidneys, intestines
  • Separate word labels for matching to diagrams
  • Answer key included for self-checking

💡 Learning Benefits

  • Build anatomy vocabulary and organ recognition
  • Practice reading and spelling organ names
  • Develop spatial awareness through labeling placement
  • Learn to connect written words with scientific images
  • Build confidence through self-checking work
  • Create foundation for biology and life science learning

🎯 How to Use

  • Print organ diagrams and word labels on cardstock
  • Laminate all pieces for durability
  • Cut out individual word labels carefully
  • Child reads each word and places it on correct organ diagram
  • Use answer key for self-checking after completion
  • Store cards and labels together in envelope or basket

🧠 Teaching Tip from a Montessori Guide

Labeling activities bridge concrete and abstract learning—children move from recognizing organ images to reading and placing scientific vocabulary. Before introducing this work, ensure children have already worked with simpler organ materials like flash cards or matching activities. They should recognize the organs visually before attempting to read and label them. When first presenting, demonstrate with 2-3 organs: read the word aloud, identify the organ on the diagram, place the label. Then invite the child to continue independently. The answer key is crucial—children check their own work, building independence and self-correction habits. This activity particularly appeals to 6-8 year olds who are confident readers and ready for more academic science content.


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