12 sweets shared among 3 friends. How many each?
equal sharing
Give one sweet to each friend in turns.
Example: Each friend gets 4 sweets.
Divide small groups equally and notice what happens when things don't share perfectly.
Give one at a time to each group until you run out. If something is left over, that is the remainder.
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equal sharing
Give one sweet to each friend in turns.
Example: Each friend gets 4 sweets.
sharing with remainder
Share until you can't give equal amounts.
Example: Each gets 2, remainder is 2.
equal groups
Count how many in each group.
Example: 3 in each group.
remainder thinking
Share until one is left.
Example: 3 each, 1 remaining.
These printables match this lesson's stage and theme, so a child can move from screen practice to calm hands-on work.
A Grade 2 math worksheet using small rupee amounts for total, compare, and choice questions.
A Grade 2 worksheet linking day routine words with simple o'clock reading.
A Grade 2 math worksheet for building and practising the 2-times and 5-times tables.
Keep the reading rhythm going with another tiny lesson.
Use simple pretend-shopping to practise addition and giving change with small rupee amounts.
Use a ruler to measure small objects in centimetres and compare their lengths.
See that multiplication is just adding the same number many times.