Teaching Kindergarten students how to count, sort, and graph is a fun way to build early math and thinking skills. These hands-on worksheets help children observe, group objects, and turn information into a simple bar graph — all through playful themes like fruits, animals, toys, and shapes.
Whether you’re a teacher, homeschool parent, or tutor, these activities make early data handling easy and enjoyable for your learners.
What Kids Will Learn
These worksheets help Kindergarten children develop:
1. Counting Skills
Kids count objects in a picture and write the total.
2. Sorting Skills
Students group items based on type, color, size, or category.
3. Early Graphing Skills
Children transfer their sorted data into a simple bar graph by coloring bars.
4. Comparison Skills
Kids learn to answer easy questions like:
Which group has more?
Which has fewer?
How many altogether?
🔗 More Kindergarten Graphing Worksheets
If your child is ready for more practice, explore:
Picture Graph Worksheets – count objects and fill in a graph.
Simple Bar Graph Worksheets – fill in bars for each category from data.
Explore our complete collection of Kindergarten Graph Worksheets.
📥 Download the Counting Sorting and Graphing Worksheets
What’s Included in These Worksheets?
Each worksheet set includes:
✔ Count the Objects Section
Children count cute themed items such as fruits, animals, toys, or shapes.
✔ Sort the Pictures Section
Kids cut-and-paste or draw lines to sort the objects into groups.
✔ Simple Bar Graph Template
A clean, kid-friendly graph where children fill the bars according to the numbers they counted.
📚 Helpful External Resources for Extra Practice
If you want more ways to support early math concepts, these trusted educational platforms offer great ideas:
Khan Academy Early Math – Counting & basic data skills
https://www.khanacademy.org/math/early-mathNCTM Classroom Resources – Teacher-approved math learning activities
https://www.nctm.org/Classroom-Resources/
FAQ: Counting, Sorting & Graphing Worksheets
1. What age group are these worksheets for?
These worksheets are perfect for Kindergarten (ages 4–6).
2. Do children need prior knowledge of graphing?
No. These worksheets introduce graphing in the simplest way — count, sort, then fill the bar graph.
3. Can I use these worksheets in a classroom math center?
Yes! They work great for centers, small groups, and independent work.
4. Are these worksheets suitable for homeschooling?
Absolutely. They are easy to print, simple to explain, and perfect for at-home learning.
