Your students will love classifying shapes into groups with this simple coloring and graphing lesson. It includes a bunch of fun worksheets and a song to keep young mathematicians engaged.
Introduce kids to key math skills on this shape-filled worksheet. Kids count and color the different shapes, then make a graph to show how many are pictured.
This worksheet is perfect for the kid that asks, "When am I ever going to use math?" Conduct a pet survey with your child by using this pet graphing worksheet.
Help the animals find their way back home by placing them in the pond or by the barn. Your kindergartener will develop her sorting and categorizing chops.
In this lesson, each student will create a unique insect graph! Discuss how many insects are on each line and which lines have the most, least, or equal amounts.
Use this fun lesson plan to introduce or review the concept of addition to your ELs. Can be used as a stand alone or support lesson for the **Nature and Couting It All Adds Up** lesson plan.
What Doesn't Belong?: Shapes, Letters, and Numbers
Circle, cheese, triangle, square: One of these things does not belong in this group. Help your child figure out the outlying object with this worksheet.
Kids who think math is impractical and boring will learn something new, and have fun, with our worksheet. Your child will survey friends about favorite sports.
In this lesson, your students will use the background knowledge that they have about counting and sorting to graph data. They will practice answering questions about the graph!
Your child will use his math know-how in a practical situation with this Graph It! worksheet. Your child will use graphing skills to chart friends' hair colors.
Kindergarteners can begin learning how to track data even before they know how to count to 10. A treasure chest matching game, color sorting, and other activities teach students the valuable skill of how to categorize items. Fun worksheets counting animals and other addition within 5 resources will thrill young learners while they practice observing and logging their finds.