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8 questions with a Earth Day theme plus a full answer key. Perfect for Grade 1 Math.
⬇ Download WorksheetStudents will count forward and backward within 20 using Earth Day objects as context.
After Q6, ask students to act out Maya's raindrop counting using their fingers — this directly mirrors the 14-raindrop problem and makes the skip-count pattern visible.
...plus 5 more questions in the full worksheet
Instructions: Read each question carefully. Write your answer and show how you counted.
Standard: CCSS.MATH.1.CC.A.1
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First-grade students develop foundational cardinality and one-to-one correspondence through repeated counting practice, skills essential for advancing to addition and subtraction within 10. Teachers can use this worksheet as a warm-up activity or independent station to assess whether students accurately count objects and match numerals to quantities, providing differentiation data for small-group instruction.
This printable Math worksheet is designed for Grade 1 students and covers Counting. The Earth Day theme keeps kids engaged while they practice essential Math skills. Every worksheet includes a full answer key making it easy for parents and teachers to check work instantly. Aligned to Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for Grade 1 Math. Print-ready at US Letter size. No login required — download and print in seconds.
Last updated: April 2026
Counting is the foundation of all math thinking, and at age 6-7, your child is building the neural pathways that will support addition, subtraction, and number sense for years to come. When children count accurately—saying the right number words in the correct order while touching or pointing to each object—they're developing one-to-one correspondence, a critical skill that means understanding that each number represents exactly one item. This worksheet gives students practice counting objects within the range of 1-20, which is where most first graders should be working. Beyond the classroom, counting appears everywhere: counting steps on a walk, counting toy blocks, even counting leaves during an Earth Day nature walk. When children master counting in this grade, they gain confidence in their ability to organize and understand their world, which builds enthusiasm for future math learning.
Many Grade 1 students skip numbers while counting (saying 1, 2, 4, 6 instead of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) or point to objects without saying each number word in sync. Others recount the same object twice or lose track of which items they've already counted, especially when objects aren't arranged in a neat line. You'll notice this when your child counts a pile of blocks and gets a different answer each time. The best way to spot this is to watch them count out loud and observe whether their finger or hand moves to match each number they say.
At home, practice counting during snack time: place 5-10 crackers or berries on the table and have your child count them out loud while touching each one before eating. Start with small quantities (3-5 items) and gradually increase to 10-15. This real-world, tactile practice helps cement the connection between the number word and the actual object, and makes counting feel purposeful rather than abstract for a 6-year-old.
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