Preview of Addition with Kitchen Things (Black & White) — Kindergarten

Addition Worksheet

Addition with Kitchen Things (Black & White) — Kindergarten

KindergartenOperations & Algebraic ThinkingCommon Core

A group of pots, plates and a rolling pin sits beside a written number on every row, with the total left blank. The child counts the pictured set first, then counts on by the number to say how many kitchen things there are altogether. It is addition with one foot in counting and one foot in symbols: the picture keeps the meaning concrete while the numeral starts the move toward written sums, and the small totals let a kindergartner check every answer by counting.

Counting on from a number, instead of counting everything again from one, is a key kindergarten step, and pairing the number with a group of kitchen things to count makes it concrete. The picture anchors the meaning while the numeral does the new work, so the symbol is introduced exactly when the child has something real to attach it to.

Children who like kitchen things (black & white) 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 kitchen tools, or try addition with ocean life. You can also browse every addition worksheet or the whole kitchen things collection for kindergarten — each sheet prints cleanly in black and white or plays online for free.

Try it — interactive

More worksheets to try

Made with the Addition Worksheets maker

Worksheet-maker page coming soon.