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Skills available for Ontario kindergarten math curriculum

Objectives are in black and IXL math skills are in dark green. Hold your mouse over the name of a skill to view a sample question. Click on the name of a skill to practise that skill.

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Numbers

Measurements

Shapes and Spatial Relationships

Patterns

  • 18 recognize, explore, describe, and compare patterns, and extend, translate, and create them, using the core of a pattern and predicting what comes next

    • 18.1 identify and describe informally the repeating nature of patterns in everyday contexts (e.g., patterns in nature such as morning-noon-night, the four seasons, or the arrangement of leaves on the stem of a plant; the pattern on a piece of clothing; the pattern made by floor tiles; the pattern of words in a book or poem; the pattern on a calendar or in a schedule; the pattern of the beat or rhythm in songs), using appropriate terminology (e.g., "goes before", "goes after", "repeats") and gestures (e.g., pointing, nodding, using slap/claps)

    • 18.2 explore and extend patterns (e.g., fill in missing elements of a repeating pattern) using a variety of materials (e.g., beads, shapes, words in a poem, beat and rhythm in music, objects from the natural world)

    • 18.3 identify the smallest unit (the core) of a pattern (e.g., ABBABBABB – the core is ABB) and describe why it is important (e.g., it helps us to know what comes next; it helps us make generalizations)

    • 18.4 create and translate patterns (e.g., re-represent "red-blue-blue, red-blue-blue, red-blue-blue" as "circle-square-square, circle-square-square, circle-square-square")

Data Analysis and Probability

  • 19 collect, organize, display, and interpret data to solve problems and to communicate information, and explore the concept of probability in everyday contexts

    • 19.1 ask questions that can be answered through data collection (e.g., "What is your favourite …?"; "How many pets do our classmates have?"; "Which month had the most snowy days – January or February?"), collect data, and make representations of their observations, using graphs (e.g., concrete graphs such as people graphs or graphs using representational objects; picture graphs)

    • 19.2 interpret data presented in graphs (e.g., "There are more children in the pizza line than in the hot dog line – that means more children like pizza"; "The blue bar is twice as long as the yellow bar"; "There were twice as many snowy days in January as snowy days in February") and draw conclusions (e.g., "We need to order more pizza than hot dogs for play day"; "January was more snowy than February")

    • 19.3 respond to and pose questions about data collection and graphs

Mathematical Processes

  • 20 apply the mathematical processes to support the development of mathematical thinking, to demonstrate understanding, and to communicate thinking and learning in mathematics, while engaged in play-based learning and in other contexts*