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Your Kindergartner and Math
Kindergartners learn math concepts by working with physical objects, such as blocks or tiles, as well as paper-and-pencil work.
In Your Child's Classroom

What math concepts will my kindergartner learn?
Your kindergartner begins to learn mathematical concepts by working with blocks, tiles or other objects that can be counted,

What to look for when you visit
  • Blocks, bottle caps, dice and other objects of different shapes and sizes for sorting and counting
  • Students, alone or in small groups, working with these objects
  • Graphs depicting the students' birthdays or their favorite foods
  • Pictures or examples of geometirc shapes such as circles, squares, triangles and other geometric shapes
classified and sorted. By using these objects, your child learns that adding means counting forward and subtracting means counting backward.

Kindergartners also learn how to group objects in a variety of ways such as color, shape, size and more. These tasks help your child begin to understand multiplication and fractions.

Your child practices counting numbers from one to 10. By the end of the year, she will be able to count to numbers greater than 10 and to count by fives (5, 10, 15, 20...) and 10s (10, 20, 30...).

Many kindergarten teachers start the day with calendar time, where your child learns math skills such as counting forward and backward and the concepts of yesterday, today and tomorrow.

From fractions to geometry
Your kindergartner is introduced to fractions, perhaps by counting the number of slices that make up a pizza, and to geometry by learning to identify geometric shapes.

Nicola Salvatico, our consulting teacher and Pennsylvania Teacher of the Year in 2005, explains: "Math at this time in a child's life is full of explorations both in and outside the classroom. Taking advantage of real-life connections helps a child move from the concrete to the abstract facets of learning math."

Getting acquainted with money, time and measurement
Your child's teacher is likely to introduce the class to thinking about money, time and measurement. Don't expect a kindergartner to use tools like rulers to measure. Your child will likely learn about distance with non-standard forms of measurement such as using her hands or her steps.

More on GreatSchools.net
She might be asked to compare the number of steps it takes to walk to the reading corner with the number required to walk to the drinking fountain.

Kindergartners learn money skills such as identifying coins and counting coins. Your child will identify pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters. He will also count pennies by ones and nickels by fives. There may be a "store" set up with a play cash register and coins where your child can explore counting and exchanging money.

Your child will begin to learn about time. He is introduced to analog and digital clocks, and should be able to identify the big hand and little hand on an analog clock. Telling time to the hour is introduced and he learns that when the big hand is on the 12 it means "o'clock."

What types of math instruction will my kindergartner get?
Kindergarten teachers typically engage students in lessons with both objects and paper-and-pencil experience. Your child is introduced to concepts by watching the teacher, then following up with hands-on activities and games that allow her to work individually and cooperatively in a group. Introduction and repetition of concepts helps a child master the math tasks that are required of them throughout the year.

Concepts are more important than math facts at this stage
While some kindergartners can memorize specific addition and subtraction facts, such as 2+2=4, it's important for them to grasp the concepts first.

Nicola Salvatico explains: "Children definitely must grasp the concepts — it's like walking; they need to develop the skills of walking first before they can actually do it and it's different for each child."

Updated August 2007

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Comments From GreatSchools.net Users
03/13/2008:
"thabks this idea is good to improve my child's ability..."

09/24/2007:
"thank u for all your articles,it helps me a lot in preparing my 5 year old.i always look forward for more kindergarten topics.i tried using numbers in all the day to day activities,and it is working. thank you."

09/18/2007:
"While I agree with you on the sequence of developmentaly appropriate math concepts, school district pacing plans prohibit teachers from letting students learn at their own pace. This is also true in language arts."

09/18/2007:
"thank you for this ...i feel relived! :)"

09/18/2007:
"This information is great to receive. I'd love to get kindergarten information on other subjects too. I also have a child in the sixth grade I'd like to receive information on too."

09/18/2007:
"Very interesting. It helps to realize that teaching styles have changed since we were in kindergarten. "

09/18/2007:
"GREAT ARTICLE! AS A FIRST TIME KINDERGARTEN PARENT I APPRECIATE THE INFORMATION."

09/18/2007:
"Thank you for all of this wonderful information. I'm an elementary school teacher and feel that understanding mathematical concepts rather than memorizing them is crucial. I've also found that having children make real-life connections with math makes learning math much more enjoyable, especially for the children that find math challenging. "

09/18/2007:
"My son is 5 years old and he started Kindergarten this year! After reading your article, I realized my son already knows his shapes, colors, counts way past 10 (up to 1000 in English & 100 in Spanish and we're not of Spanish decent), knows how to tell time, counts by even numbers and odd numbers(2,4,6...&1,3,5...so on), and knows how to do addition & subtraction. So based on his knowledge will he get bored in school? Is there an advanced testing at that age? He's in public school...should I transfer him to a Private school like a Montessori program? I'd hate for him to go through an entire year of school and not learn anything! Please advise! Concerned mother of a Kindergartner"

06/18/2007:
"Thank you for these great tips to utilize with my son, who is is 5 years old. He is a very strong reader, but has acknowledged that math is more difficult for him. I look forward to engaging him in these activities!"

01/20/2006:
"Thank you for this article, it helped to confirm that my childs school is up to par. Also gave me some great ideas on keeping her excited about what she is being taught. "

12/13/2005:
"This article gives me an idea of what to expect and shows me that I can apply the basics at home to enhance what my child is learning in school."

11/16/2005:
"great job! im happy to say my daughters school is keeping up. these articles are great for me."

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