In Kindergarten, a great deal of focus and rich interactions are devoted to developing the fundamentals of numbers, such as counting objects to tell how many there are. By the end of the year, Kindergarten students will be able to add and subtract small numbers. Addition and subtraction will then be a very strong focus in math in first and second grade. To explore the math learning progression for Kindergarten, please click HERE.
The Kindergarten Math Standards are designed to bring focus to the Standards. The Critical Areas for Kindergarten are:
Representing, relating, and operating on whole numbers, initially with sets of objects. Students use numbers, including written numerals, to represent quantities and to solve quantitative problems, such as counting objects in a set; counting out a given number of objects; comparing sets or numerals; and modeling simple joining and separating situations with sets of objects, or eventually with equations such as 5 + 2 = 7 and 7 – 2 = 5. (Kindergarten students should see addition and subtraction equations, and student writing of equations is encouraged, but it is not required.) Students choose, combine, and apply effective strategies for answering quantitative questions, including quickly recognizing the cardinalities of small sets of objects, counting and producing sets of given sizes, counting the number of objects in combined sets, or counting the number of objects that remain in a set after some are taken away.
Describing shapes and space. Students describe their physical world using geometric ideas (e.g., shape, orientation, spatial relations) and vocabulary. They identify, name, and describe basic two-dimensional shapes, such as squares, triangles, circles, rectangles, trapezoids, rhombuses, and hexagons, presented in a variety of ways (e.g., with different sizes and orientations), as well as three-dimensional shapes such as cubes, cones, cylinders, and spheres. They use basic shapes and spatial reasoning to model objects in their environment and to construct more complex shapes.