Light and heavy
weight words
Lift two objects and compare them.
Example: The book is heavier than the paper.
Compare weight and how much containers can hold using child-friendly objects and simple observation.
Let children hold, lift, pour, and compare. The goal is everyday math language, not formal units.
Open one card at a time, read the text together, and use the audio button when hearing the line once helps.
weight words
Lift two objects and compare them.
Example: The book is heavier than the paper.
capacity idea
Compare two cups or bottles.
Example: This bottle holds more water.
capacity idea
Notice which container holds less.
Example: This cup holds less water.
These printables match this lesson's stage and theme, so a child can move from screen practice to calm hands-on work.
A Grade 1 place-value follow-up using tens bundles and single ones.
A Grade 1 worksheet for building and checking number bonds to 10.
A Grade 1 math worksheet for practising take-away using pictures and number lines.
These suggestions stay in the same stage first, then widen slightly within the same subject shelf.
Compare objects by length using hand spans, blocks, or paper strips before formal rulers.
Use picture groups to see what happens when we add one more or take one away.
See how numbers can be grouped into tens and ones using sticks, straws, or drawn bundles.