Confession: I’m a Dollar Tree addict. There, I admit it. I have a problem. You see, I stroll around that amazing store and fill my cart up with items that my brain says would be great in my classroom, like these trays that make a great kindergarten addition lesson!
Seriously, as soon as I walk into TDT I just want to throw my hands in the air and shout “BUY ALL THE THINGS!”
And then all of those items end up in my garage waiting for my brain to come up with classroom use. Sometimes it happens…and other times, well, let’s just say we’ve added major storage in my office for all of my teaching stuff.
But…sometimes I see something and say “OMG! I can do…blah blah…with those.” And I buy them. But not just the number I need. Nope. I buy a few extras. Just in case. I mean, what if they don’t have them ever again?! Does that make me a teacher hoarder?
I have a bunch of these flower trays and I’ve used them for painting trays. Works great.
I mean for a dollar…you might as well buy 20. Or 30. Or more.
As soon as I these fun colors, I knew exactly what I was going to do.
Make an addition sorting game. And make it flowery because these trays look like flowers!
So here’s how I made this fun kindergarten addition game!
I made numbers using my Silhouette Cameo machine! But don’t worry. If you don’t have one of those, you can totally use a Sharpie or print numbers on clear mailing labels and stick those to the tray! Or use dot stickers from Amazon to make the numbers. Easy peasy!
It works perfectly for adding to 10. Or subtracting to 10. Or adding and subtracting to 20!
Having two trays makes differentiation easy too.
After the trays were prepared I made some flowery addition cards and a recording sheet.
And BAM! Flower Power Addition!
Put the cards in the middle of the flower.
Students choose a card.
Solve the equation.
Sort the card in the flower petal for the correct answer. Did you know that sorting is a higher-order thinking skill? So when we add sorting to a skill we make that skill a higher-order activity!
Write the equation and answer on the recording sheet!so



Cheap. Easy. Engaging. Easy to differentiate.
And this same concept could be used for so many skills:
subtraction
counting
vowels
blends
sounds
and more…
And I have now successfully used .000000000001% of my Dollar Tree purchases!
GO ME!
Snag your freebie by clicking on the picture!
For more addition and subtraction creations, check out these resources:
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6 comments
🙂 Love it!
More proof that you are a genius…a generous genius, and you are absolutely hilarious! Thanks for giving me the best laugh of the day and a cute center to go with the trays I might just have piled up in the basement!! Jodi
I use the trays for sorting. I place items in the middle and the students sort into the outside compartments.
I use the trays for sorting. I place items in the middle and the students sort into the outside compartments.
I have at least three of those trays myself. I really have to watch myself at Dollar Tree. I often use them for sorting or for displaying tools for play dough or crafting supplies.
Love it! Just checked in my local DT but no cute flower trays. I’m headed to Ft. Campbell next weekend so I will look in your neck of the woods while we are there.😉