Addition Worksheet
Addition with Flowers — Kindergarten
Every row of this kindergarten worksheet pairs a group of tulips, daisies and a rose you can count with a plain number written beside it, and leaves the total as an empty box. The child counts the pictured flowers, then counts on from that number to find how many there are in all. Seeing a real group on one side and a written numeral on the other is the first bridge from counting pictures to working with symbols, and the amounts stay small enough that every answer can be checked by counting what is shown.
Reading one addend as a numeral while counting the other as pictures keeps addition meaningful without keeping it purely pictorial forever. It is the gentlest introduction to written numbers in sums — the flowers stay countable, the totals stay small, and the child learns that the figure on the page names the same amount they would have counted out by hand.
Children who like flowers settle into this quickly, and it suits a calm independent task or a counting game on the board. When the numbers feel easy, count a fresh group in addition with forest creatures, or try addition with kitchen things (black & white). You can also browse every addition worksheet or the whole flowers collection for kindergarten — each sheet prints cleanly in black and white or plays online for free.
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