Introduce your child to George Washington and his contributions to our country's history. If they already know their numbers, have them help George count the ships! Challenge them to fill in the missing numbers between 107 and 120.
Ask your child to name some popular carnivores. Can they tell you what the animal in the worksheet is? A Tiger? Get them to count from 100 to 120 to connect the dots. After they finish the first picture, keep counting to help them practice!
Show your child the frog's life cycle and have them count from 100 to 120. Ask them to find the missing numbers in the picture and have them check the answers beneath the numbers. Help them get it right!
Count from 100 to 120 with your child to help them finish the worksheet! Pet owners will be especially excited to help the cute frog complete its picture. With proper counting, your child will be able to easily connect the dots and finish the picture of the green frog.
Little space explorers will love counting, sorting and strengthening number sense with this galactic worksheet! They'll use traceable lines to sort pictures of stars, planets and rockets into categories according to properties. After sorting, they'll count each item and fill in the boxes. Bold pictures make it fun and build critical thinking skills.
This fun worksheet has your kids counting and sorting friendly animal faces in a bed of ten! It's a great way for them to practice their mental math skills, like adding and multiplying more efficiently. Plus, it brings a new meaning to the classic song "Monkeys Jumping on the Bed"!
Kids will love these cheery elephants that help them discover grouping and counting by fives. It's a great way to start learning addition and multiplication, while also developing fine motor skills. Download the free PDF and let the fun begin.
Allow your children to hone their critical thinking and number reasoning skills with this free worksheet. They'll sort, count, and trace fruits while learning basic number sense. A fun, delicious learning experience with familiar pictures they'll love.
Sort chocolate and candy with your kids! Help them use recognizable items and pictures to sort, practice counting with one-to-one representation, and develop their fine motor skills with the traceable lines. Download this free worksheet to get started. Yum!
Place value is a key math topic. If your child needs more practice, use this worksheet. It challenges them to figure out which group of tens equals a 100, then check the answer and move to the next question.
Test your children's counting skills with this worksheet. Have them count from 90 to 120, checking for missing numbers. You'll be able to see how well they do and how far they have progressed. See how high they can count with little or no mistakes!
Can your child count in tens? Show them how to count 100 boxes in stacks of tens. A worksheet can help them understand the concept. Ask them to count boxes of pineapples in stacks of tens and circle the truck with 100 pineapples.
This tracing sheet can help your child improve their number knowledge, from hundreds to tens. On the left are different numbers, with the same on the right. Ask your child to connect the matching numbers with the dotted lines. Make learning numbers fun with this traceable printout.
Math can be stressful for kids. But you can help relieve their anxiety with this simple worksheet. It gives them practice to help them prepare for tougher tasks. Have your child look at the numbers and green digit, then trace the dotted lines to match the green digit with its value in base ten blocks. This will help make math more manageable.
Take your child to the garden to count flower petals and trace numbers with this fun kindergarten PDF worksheet. They'll learn to count and write, all while enjoying the sweet scent of the flowers.
Take your kids on an elevator ride and have them help you. With this worksheet, little ones meet Lily and her mom. They're taking an elevator from Floor 1 to Floor 8. Ask them to check the floors they pass and help the two reach their destination.
This worksheet stimulates thinking about arrays and how to represent them. Instruct students to count the 6 arrays and find which ones sum up to 12. Ask them to check the answers for accuracy.
Does your child love Easter? Do they adore the Easter bunny and egg hunts? Help them have fun with this worksheet! Go through it with them and check the equations for each array. Then, have them circle the correct sum. It's a great way to make the holiday extra exciting!
Explain rows (horizontal) and columns (vertical) to your child before starting the worksheet. Show them the picture and the arrows indicating direction. Your child should be able to answer the questions easily after that. Help them match the fruit arrays that match the descriptions.
Help your child count and underline the matching number sentence in the worksheet. Ask them if the total number of birds in each picture is odd or even, then check the correct box. When two equal numbers are added, the sum is always an even number (e.g. 2+2=4, 4+4=8, both divisible by 2).
Explain to your kids even and odd numbers using this worksheet. All objects in a group of even numbers can be paired in twos, while an odd number leaves one object unpaired. Ask your students to find and check the groups with an odd number of fish, counting and figuring out which ones are odd.
Your math learners can explore the School of Magic with this worksheet. They'll read equations with addition and subtraction numbers under 20, count back and forth to find the answer, then complete the counting sentences. Fun pictures and easy accuracy make it an enjoyable and successful learning experience.
Kids love pet stores! This free, fun PDF worksheet engages little learners to solve word problems with counting and addition. With adorable animals to focus on, your child will practice arithmetic with three addends to find the sum! Help them gain success with word addition word problems.
At Kids Academy, we know pictures make math come alive and make sense. This worksheet is perfect for early learners to practice word problems. Kids read each problem and count the images that represent the numbers, then solve the problem with addition or subtraction to get the right answer.