Learning Outcomes
Worksheet → Compare two numbers → Child chooses greater, smaller, or equal and explains the choice using simple number words.
Kindergartener → Relate number size to meaning → Child starts making sense of addition and subtraction situations as “more,” “less,” or “same.”
Parent-child practice → Use pointing and sentence talk → Child becomes quicker at comparing without relying on repeated counting each problem.
Numbers & Counting
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Learn numbers, counting, and early number sense through simple examples
Kindergarten Addition and Subtraction Comparison Page
This worksheet asks your kindergartener to compare two numbers and choose which one is greater, smaller, or equal. It practices addition and subtraction number sense by learning how numbers relate to each other.
At age 5, this comparison step matters because it builds a quick “bigger or same” feeling. If your child stalls on number comparisons, five-year-olds may count again and again instead of comparing.
For this exact page, cover the second number box with a finger. Ask your child to read the first number, uncover the second, and decide which label matches. Have the child say a full sentence like, “Five is greater than three,” or “Four is equal to four,” before circling.
This worksheet is useful because it focuses on one clear choice each time: greater, smaller, or equal. The simple layout makes comparison talk easy during quick breaks, without getting stuck on hard steps.
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