5 and 5
make 10
Join both groups and count all.
Example: 5 and 5 make 10.
Use two small groups to see friendly number pairs that make 10.
This is an easy bridge into later addition. Keep the groups visible and let children move the objects by hand.
Hover on desktop or tap on mobile to hear each card.
make 10
Join both groups and count all.
Example: 5 and 5 make 10.
make 10
Use counters or beads to check.
Example: 6 and 4 make 10.
make 10
Count both parts together.
Example: 7 and 3 make 10.
These printables match this lesson's stage and theme, so a child can move from screen practice to calm hands-on work.
Build the idea of making 10 using dots, groups, and simple colouring tasks.
A UKG math sheet for simple addition using pictures and number sentences up to 10.
A UKG number worksheet to practise order, missing numbers, and before/after clues.
These next steps stay in the same stage so the child does not get sent backward.
Try simple reverse counting with fingers, blocks, or a countdown voice.
Put two tiny groups together and count how many there are altogether.
Use simple number order language so children can place a number before, after, or between two others.