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Number 18 Tracing and Counting Printable Worksheet
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This printable math worksheet helps kindergarten and first-grade students master the number 18 through tracing, counting, and graphing. Students practice fine motor skills by tracing the numeral and word, then build one-to-one correspondence by counting eighteen penguins and coloring the matching grid.
At a Glance
- Grade: Kindergarten · Subject: Math
- Standard:
CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.K.CC.B.5— Count to answer how many questions about objects up to 20- Skill Focus: Number 18 tracing and graphing
- Format: 1 page · 3 tasks · PDF
- Best For: Independent morning work
- Time: 10–15 minutes
This single-page PDF contains three structured activities for the number 18. The top section features a star graphic with the number 18 and the word "eighteen". Below, students find two rows of dashed tracing lines with directional arrows. The bottom half displays 18 penguin illustrations alongside a 20-square grid for counting and graphing.
Zero-Prep Workflow
This worksheet requires under 2 minutes of teacher preparation. Follow these three steps:
- Print (1 minute): Copy the single-page PDF for your class.
- Distribute (30 seconds): Hand out sheets with pencils and crayons.
- Review (30 seconds): Check pencil grip and verify students colored 18 squares.
The self-explanatory layout makes this sheet ideal for emergency sub plans or homework.
Standards Alignment
This activity aligns with CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.K.CC.B.5, which requires counting to answer "how many?" questions about up to 20 objects. It also supports CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.K.CC.A.3 for writing numbers. Both standard codes can be copied directly into lesson plans, IEP goals, or district curriculum mapping tools.
How to Use It
Use this worksheet during your unit on numbers 11 to 20. Introduce it after a whole-group counting circle. Alternatively, use it as a formative assessment. Observe students' counting paths to check if they mark off penguins to avoid double-counting. Expected completion time is 10 to 15 minutes.
Who It's For
This resource is designed for kindergarten students learning teen numbers and first graders needing intervention. For students struggling with fine motor control, pair this worksheet with a tactile sand tray. Advanced learners can write the word "eighteen" independently. Pair this activity with a physical ten-frame manipulative.
This educational resource targets early numeracy skills essential for kindergarten mathematical development. By integrating number tracing with object counting and grid coloring, the worksheet reinforces the relationship between written numerals and physical quantities. According to the ScienceDirect TpT Analysis, structured worksheets that combine fine motor tracing with visual representation grids significantly improve number recognition and one-to-one correspondence in early childhood classrooms. The activities align with standard `CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.K.CC.B.5`, helping students count up to 20 objects systematically. The inclusion of a 20-square grid introduces basic data representation, preparing young learners for more complex graphing tasks in later grades. Teachers can confidently integrate this evidence-based tool into daily math centers, small group interventions, or independent practice routines to support diverse learning needs and track student progress toward foundational math standards.




