Learning Outcomes
Kindergarten learners → subtract one number from another → write the correct difference after counting what remains.
Kindergarten learners → practice number sense for subtraction → spot what quantity changes when something is taken away.
Kindergarten learners → review subtraction in short steps → feel more confident solving similar problems with fewer finger counts.

Kindergarten Subtraction Worksheet
This subtraction worksheet asks the child to subtract one number from another and write the difference.
At age 6, this matters because kids are still building number sense, and five-year-olds get bored fast with long explanations. When subtraction feels like rules, they may lose focus halfway through counting.
Pick one problem on the page and do it slowly with your finger. Say the starting number, point to the smaller number that will be taken away, then count what is left and write the answer together.
The worksheet is useful because it focuses on one clear job, subtracting one number from another, so the practice stays short and doable. It also works well for parent-child time when you want calm, hands-on repetition without extra steps.
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