Sorting Worksheet
Sort Supermarket Things and Furniture
Put each picture with its own kind. The child looks at a mix of a cart, a basket and a till and a sofa, a table and a lamp and sorts every one into the supermarket things group or the furniture group. The skill is grouping by category — recognizing what makes something one of the supermarket things versus one of the furniture — which is exactly the kind of organizing thinking Kindergarten builds. Familiar pictures keep the task about the sorting decision, never about counting.
Classification begins with simple two-group sorts like this one. A child learns to look past surface details to what really groups the supermarket things together and separates them from the furniture. That is core Kindergarten readiness — organizing things by category — and the familiar pictures make every decision about the sorting, not about figuring out what the picture is.
Children who like sorting supermarket things and furniture get the hang of grouping quickly, and a tidy two-set page feels satisfying to finish. When this feels easy, sort the pictures in sort supermarket things and insects and bugs, or try sort supermarket things and space. You can also browse every sorting worksheet or the whole kindergarten collection — each sheet prints cleanly or plays online for free, and the more a child sorts, the sharper their eye for what goes together.
Try it — interactive
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