Big and small
size words
Compare two familiar objects.
Example: The ball is big.
Compare size and length with real objects children can hold, sort, and talk about.
Use toy cars, pencils, spoons, or leaves. Let the child hold two things and compare them visually.
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size words
Compare two familiar objects.
Example: The ball is big.
length words
Line the objects up to compare them.
Example: This pencil is long.
height words
Use people or stacked blocks.
Example: The tower is tall.
grouping task
Put similar sizes together.
Example: These are the small ones.
These printables match this lesson's stage and theme, so a child can move from screen practice to calm hands-on work.
An LKG worksheet for counting groups from 6 to 10 and noticing more or less.
A pattern-tracing sheet for LKG with standing lines, sleeping lines, curves, and zig-zags.
Sort simple people, objects, and places into family, home, or school groups.
Keep the reading rhythm going with another tiny lesson.
Notice familiar shapes in toys, food, and objects children see every day.
Notice circles, squares, triangles, and repeating patterns in everyday things.
See and continue very small repeating patterns using colours, claps, or picture objects.