What comes after 4?
number order
Count forward if needed.
Example: After 4 comes 5.
Use simple number order language so children can place a number before, after, or between two others.
Keep the numbers small and visible. Ask one question at a time and let the child point or say the answer.
Hover on desktop or tap on mobile to hear each card.
number order
Count forward if needed.
Example: After 4 comes 5.
number order
Count backward slowly if needed.
Example: Before 7 comes 6.
number order
Use fingers or blocks if needed.
Example: 3 is between 2 and 4.
These printables match this lesson's stage and theme, so a child can move from screen practice to calm hands-on work.
A UKG number worksheet to practise order, missing numbers, and before/after clues.
Build the idea of making 10 using dots, groups, and simple colouring tasks.
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 two small groups to see friendly number pairs that make 10.