Description
Introduce early coding concepts without screens using this unplugged algorithm worksheet pack for K-2 students. These printable activities help young learners understand algorithms as step-by-step directions through sequencing, debugging, loops, conditionals, commands, patterns, decomposition, input/output, and review.
Students practice coding logic with familiar classroom actions such as brushing teeth, packing a backpack, lining up, making art, clapping patterns, choosing commands, breaking tasks into steps, and building coding sentences. The pages are visual, beginner-friendly, and designed to make computational thinking feel concrete and manageable.
What is included:
- 12 student activity pages
- Answer key
- Make an Algorithm sequencing page
- Find the Bug debugging activity
- Loop It repeated-pattern page
- IF This, THEN That conditional logic page
- Choose the Command activity
- Break It Into Steps decomposition page
- Input and Output sorting page
- Build a 3-Step Code cut-and-paste style activity
- Same or Different Algorithm comparison page
- Build a Coding Sentence page
- Design My Own Algorithm page
- Unplugged Coding Review
Students will practice:
- Putting steps in the correct order
- Finding and fixing bugs in directions
- Identifying loops and repeated patterns
- Matching commands to actions
- Breaking a larger task into smaller steps
- Sorting inputs and outputs
- Comparing algorithms
- Writing or drawing their own simple algorithm
- Reviewing key unplugged coding vocabulary
This resource is a strong fit for computer science lessons, STEM centers, technology class without devices, coding week, morning work, early finishers, sub plans, enrichment, or an introduction to computational thinking. It is especially useful when you want students to learn coding concepts through pencil-and-paper practice before moving to a device.
Teacher prep is low: print the pages, choose the activities that fit your lesson, and use the answer key for quick checking. The pages can be used across several lessons or as a complete mini packet.
Please review the preview before purchasing to confirm the level and format are right for your students.Introduce early coding concepts without screens using this unplugged algorithm worksheet pack for K-2 students. These printable activities help young learners understand algorithms as step-by-step directions through sequencing, debugging, loops, conditionals, commands, patterns, decomposition, input/output, and review.Students practice coding logic with familiar classroom actions such as brushing teeth, packing a backpack, lining up, making art, clapping patterns, choosing commands, breaking tasks into steps, and building coding sentences. The pages are visual, beginner-friendly, and designed to make computational thinking feel concrete and manageable.What is included:- 12 student activity pages- Answer key- Make an Algorithm sequencing page- Find the Bug debugging activity- Loop It repeated-pattern page- IF This, THEN That conditional logic page- Choose the Command activity- Break It Into Steps decomposition page- Input and Output sorting page- Build a 3-Step Code cut-and-paste style activity- Same or Different Algorithm comparison page- Build a Coding Sentence page- Design My Own Algorithm page- Unplugged Coding ReviewStudents will practice:- Putting steps in the correct order- Finding and fixing bugs in directions- Identifying loops and repeated patterns- Matching commands to actions- Breaking a larger task into smaller steps- Sorting inputs and outputs- Comparing algorithms- Writing or drawing their own simple algorithm- Reviewing key unplugged coding vocabularyThis resource is a strong fit for computer science lessons, STEM centers, technology class without devices, coding week, morning work, early finishers, sub plans, enrichment, or an introduction to computational thinking. It is especially useful when you want students to learn coding concepts through pencil-and-paper practice before moving to a device.Teacher prep is low: print the pages, choose the activities that fit your lesson, and use the answer key for quick checking. The pages can be used across several lessons or as a complete mini packet.Please review the preview before purchasing to confirm the level and format are right for your students.
Unplugged Algorithm Adventures: Step-by-Step Coding Worksheets for K-2
Highlights
Description
Introduce early coding concepts without screens using this unplugged algorithm worksheet pack for K-2 students. These printable activities help young learners understand algorithms as step-by-step directions through sequencing, debugging, loops, conditionals, commands, patterns, decomposition, input/output, and review.
Students practice coding logic with familiar classroom actions such as brushing teeth, packing a backpack, lining up, making art, clapping patterns, choosing commands, breaking tasks into steps, and building coding sentences. The pages are visual, beginner-friendly, and designed to make computational thinking feel concrete and manageable.
What is included:
- 12 student activity pages
- Answer key
- Make an Algorithm sequencing page
- Find the Bug debugging activity
- Loop It repeated-pattern page
- IF This, THEN That conditional logic page
- Choose the Command activity
- Break It Into Steps decomposition page
- Input and Output sorting page
- Build a 3-Step Code cut-and-paste style activity
- Same or Different Algorithm comparison page
- Build a Coding Sentence page
- Design My Own Algorithm page
- Unplugged Coding Review
Students will practice:
- Putting steps in the correct order
- Finding and fixing bugs in directions
- Identifying loops and repeated patterns
- Matching commands to actions
- Breaking a larger task into smaller steps
- Sorting inputs and outputs
- Comparing algorithms
- Writing or drawing their own simple algorithm
- Reviewing key unplugged coding vocabulary
This resource is a strong fit for computer science lessons, STEM centers, technology class without devices, coding week, morning work, early finishers, sub plans, enrichment, or an introduction to computational thinking. It is especially useful when you want students to learn coding concepts through pencil-and-paper practice before moving to a device.
Teacher prep is low: print the pages, choose the activities that fit your lesson, and use the answer key for quick checking. The pages can be used across several lessons or as a complete mini packet.
Please review the preview before purchasing to confirm the level and format are right for your students.Introduce early coding concepts without screens using this unplugged algorithm worksheet pack for K-2 students. These printable activities help young learners understand algorithms as step-by-step directions through sequencing, debugging, loops, conditionals, commands, patterns, decomposition, input/output, and review.Students practice coding logic with familiar classroom actions such as brushing teeth, packing a backpack, lining up, making art, clapping patterns, choosing commands, breaking tasks into steps, and building coding sentences. The pages are visual, beginner-friendly, and designed to make computational thinking feel concrete and manageable.What is included:- 12 student activity pages- Answer key- Make an Algorithm sequencing page- Find the Bug debugging activity- Loop It repeated-pattern page- IF This, THEN That conditional logic page- Choose the Command activity- Break It Into Steps decomposition page- Input and Output sorting page- Build a 3-Step Code cut-and-paste style activity- Same or Different Algorithm comparison page- Build a Coding Sentence page- Design My Own Algorithm page- Unplugged Coding ReviewStudents will practice:- Putting steps in the correct order- Finding and fixing bugs in directions- Identifying loops and repeated patterns- Matching commands to actions- Breaking a larger task into smaller steps- Sorting inputs and outputs- Comparing algorithms- Writing or drawing their own simple algorithm- Reviewing key unplugged coding vocabularyThis resource is a strong fit for computer science lessons, STEM centers, technology class without devices, coding week, morning work, early finishers, sub plans, enrichment, or an introduction to computational thinking. It is especially useful when you want students to learn coding concepts through pencil-and-paper practice before moving to a device.Teacher prep is low: print the pages, choose the activities that fit your lesson, and use the answer key for quick checking. The pages can be used across several lessons or as a complete mini packet.Please review the preview before purchasing to confirm the level and format are right for your students.




