New York Kindergarten Math: What Students Learn
Kindergarten math in New York covers five major areas: counting and cardinality, operations and algebraic thinking, number and operations in base ten, measurement and data, and geometry. Every topic is aligned to the NYS Next Generation Mathematics Learning Standards, which guide what New York schools teach in Kindergarten.
Counting and Cardinality
New York Kindergarten students learn to count to 100 by ones and tens, count forward from any given number, and write numbers from 0 to 20. They connect counting to cardinality — understanding that the last number counted tells how many objects are in a group. Students also compare groups and written numerals to identify which is greater than, less than, or equal to another.
- Count to 100 by ones and by tens
- Count forward from a given number
- Write numbers 0 to 20
- Understand cardinality and the meaning of numbers
- Compare groups and written numerals between 1 and 10
Addition and Subtraction
Kindergarteners in New York begin addition and subtraction using objects, fingers, drawings, and equations. They solve word problems, decompose numbers up to 10 in multiple ways, find pairs that make 10, and build fluency adding and subtracting within 5.
- Represent addition and subtraction with objects and drawings
- Solve word problems within 10
- Decompose numbers less than or equal to 10 into pairs
- Find the number that makes 10 when added to a given number
- Fluently add and subtract within 5
Numbers 11 to 19 and Place Value Foundation
Students compose and decompose numbers from 11 to 19 into ten ones and some additional ones. This introduces the foundation of place value that students will build on throughout 1st and 2nd grade.
Measurement and Data
Kindergarten students describe measurable attributes of objects like length and weight, directly compare two objects using a shared measurable attribute, and classify objects into categories by sorting and counting.
Geometry
Students identify and describe shapes in their environment, name shapes regardless of size or orientation, and distinguish between two-dimensional and three-dimensional shapes. They also analyze, model, and compose shapes to form larger shapes.
- Name and describe shapes in the environment
- Identify 2D and 3D shapes
- Analyze similarities and differences between shapes
- Model and compose simple shapes
How StudyPug Helps New York Kindergarten Students
StudyPug provides video lessons and practice problems for every Kindergarten math topic listed in the NYS Next Generation Mathematics Learning Standards. Each lesson is short and focused so young learners stay engaged. Parents can use StudyPug to support homework, reinforce classroom learning, or help their child get ahead before the next school year.