Learning Outcomes
Food group pictures → sorting skill → kindergarten child correctly places at least 6 of 8 foods under Healthy Food or Sweet Treats.
Healthy vs Sweet category labels → listening and repeating → child uses Healthy Food and Sweet Treats words while sorting each picture into columns.
Four fruit and four sweet examples → identifying familiar foods → child points to ingredients and names one healthy and one sweet choice after sorting.

Food Groups Sorting Worksheet for Kindergarten: Healthy vs Sweet
The Food Groups Sorting worksheet practices sorting food pictures into two nutrition categories: Healthy Food and Sweet Treats. Kindergarten children move each fruit or sweet picture to the matching column, building everyday food-group understanding.
Food-group sorting helps children connect food names with basic choices, which supports healthy meal talk and steadier vocabulary during snack and dinner. This skill also gives kindergarteners a clear way to organize information without needing reading.
For the Food Groups Sorting worksheet, set out two labels, “Healthy Food” and “Sweet Treats,” and let the child place each picture. After each move, ask the child to say the column name out loud, then quickly check the next picture together.
This specific Food Groups Sorting worksheet stands out because it uses a simple picture-column setup with a small set of foods, so kindergarteners can finish in one short sitting. The worksheet targets nutrition & food groups by practicing the exact “sort into Healthy Food or Sweet Treats” action again and again.
Limited Time Sale
Kids’ Workbooks!
Boost your child’s skills with our discounted workbooks. Engaging activities for preschool, kindergarten, and grade 1 - now at special sale prices!








Fast shipping
Secure Payment
Licensed Teachers
For the planet
Printed in the USA
Find fresh ideas
To help your little learners grow!
Helpful guides for parents and teachers, and tips for making learning at home super fun.

Getting an energetic preschooler to sit still for handwriting practice often results in frustrating power struggles. This educator-approved playbook provides 10 screen-free, proprioceptive calm-down activities designed to regulate a dysregulated nervous system. Learn how heavy work, fine motor warm-ups, and breath control prepare a child's body and mind for successful, tear-free tracing and writing.
Sunny Hedge
When a preschooler complains of boredom, parents often feel immediate guilt and offer digital entertainment. This educator-approved guide explains the psychological mechanism of unstructured time and why boredom is the ultimate catalyst for independent play. Learn how to survive the initial complaining phase and utilize high-quality printed workbooks to bridge the gap between digital stimulation and deep, analog focus.
Sunny Hedge
Many parents panic when their preschooler cannot sit still for more than two minutes, fearing the child is not ready for formal schooling. This educator-tested guide explains why early attention spans are naturally short and provides a step-by-step plan to gently stretch cognitive stamina. Learn how to build a reliable 15-minute focus habit using screen-free, analog activities before the first day of kindergarten.
Sunny Hedge
The kitchen provides a natural, highly engaging mathematics classroom for preschoolers. This educator-approved playbook details 10 easy, screen-free number games using everyday pantry items and snacks. Learn how sorting pasta, measuring water, and counting blueberries builds foundational counting skills, one-to-one correspondence, and deep number recognition without any formal preparation.
Sunny HedgeJoin the Screen-Free Movement.
Get exclusive activities, expert tips, and inspiration for a more meaningful, offline family life.





