This Kindergarten hard worksheet 3 challenges students with word problems, number ordering, and visual estimation tasks for stronger thinking. Children solve stories about toys and grapes, order three numbers from least to greatest, and use visual estimation to compare full and nearly empty containers. Four multiple choice problems and five fill-in items deepen Kindergarten understanding of more, less, and equal in real, everyday counting situations.
Style:
Comparing Numbers More Less Equal
Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the best answer for each question.
1. Tom has 5 toys. Lily has 8 toys. Who has more toys?
A) Lily
B) Tom
C) Both same
D) Cannot tell
2. Order from smallest to largest: 6, 2, 9. Which is the smallest?
A) 6
B) 2
C) 9
D) 0
3. A jar has many marbles. Another jar has only a few. Which jar has less?
A) Many jar
B) Both same
C) Few jar
D) Empty jar
4. Sam ate 3 grapes. Mia ate 3 grapes too. Who ate more?
A) Sam
B) Mia
C) Both ate more
D) Neither, equal
Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct answer on each line.
1. Order least to greatest: 4, 1, 7. Smallest is 1.
2. Order least to greatest: 4, 1, 7. Greatest is 7.
3. A box of crayons looks fuller than another box. The fuller box has more.
4. Ben has 10 stickers. Ana has 4 stickers. Ben has more stickers than Ana.
5. Two plates with the same cookies — they are equal.
Comparing Numbers More Less Equal
★ Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the best answer for each question.
1. Tom has 5 toys. Lily has 8 toys. Who has more toys?
A) Lily
B) Tom
C) Both same
D) Cannot tell
2. Order from smallest to largest: 6, 2, 9. Which is the smallest?
A) 6
B) 2
C) 9
D) 0
3. A jar has many marbles. Another jar has only a few. Which jar has less?
A) Many jar
B) Both same
C) Few jar
D) Empty jar
4. Sam ate 3 grapes. Mia ate 3 grapes too. Who ate more?
A) Sam
B) Mia
C) Both ate more
D) Neither, equal
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct answer on each line.
1) Order least to greatest: 4, 1, 7. Smallest is 1.
2) Order least to greatest: 4, 1, 7. Greatest is 7.
3) A box of crayons looks fuller than another box. The fuller box has more.
4) Ben has 10 stickers. Ana has 4 stickers. Ben has more stickers than Ana.
5) Two plates with the same cookies — they are equal.
Ready to Practice?
Complete each section carefully.
9 Questions
12-18 minutes
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