Which picnic games do you prefer? This bar graph shows some of the most popular picnic activities. Students will learn about analyzing data from a bar graph.
Don't let your second grader forget graphs! Be sure to review how to read a bar graph and pictograph with help from this handy worksheet. Challenge your young mathematician to read the graphs and answer some questions.
In this math worksheet, children will read a bar graph about popular winter sports, then practice extracting and analyzing data as they answer five questions.
Keeping a reading log is a great way to encourage your child to set goals and track their progress. Your students will build reading fluency and stamina by logging and graphing their reading time.
Maintaining a reading log is a fun way to encourage your child to set goals and track their progress. Students will keep track of their month-by-month reading stamina and practice their bar graphing with this reading log worksheet.
Pictographs are a great introduction to working with data and graphs. Kids help the hamburger cafe compare the number of hamburgers they sold using pictographs.
Students practice creating a Venn diagram by organizing the pool toys into the correct categories. Students will also learn to differentiate between shapes.
Boost your child's data know-how with a lesson on reading and understanding a math pictograph, a kind of graph in which pictures stand in for number data.
Want to help your students begin to think critically about data? Laminate and display this worksheet to spark discussion about different ways to represent data.