20 sets of sequencing cards and folded booklets to help teach sequencing skills to your preschool, pre-k, or kindergarten students.

Use these sequencing cards and folded booklets as a small group activity or place them in a center to help your little learners develop sequencing skills.
Each folded booklet is one single page. The page is folded into fourths to create an easy-to-assemble, no prep booklet – just print, fold, and go!

What You Get in Each Sequencing Set
Each of the 20 sequencing sets includes the following printable resources:
- 1 Sequencing Sheet without numbers (color + b/w)
- 1 Sequencing Sheet with numbers (color + b/w)
- 1 Set of 4 Step Sequencing Cards without numbers (color + b/w)
- 1 Set of 4 Step Sequencing Cards with numbers (color + b/w)
- 1 Folded Sequencing Booklet (color + b/w)

What Students Will Learn
- Sequencing Skills
- First, Next, Then, Last
- Concepts of Print
Sequences Included
- How to Make Apple Pie
- How to Dye Eggs
- How to Wrap a Gift
- How to Make Gingerbread Cookies
- How to Grow a Plant
- How to Make Applesauce
- How to Carve a Pumpkin
- How to Have a Picnic
- How to Rake Leaves
- How to Build a Sandcastle
- How to Build a Snowman
- How to Make a Sundae
- How to Make a Valentine
- How to Wash a Dog
- How to Wash Dishes
- How to Brush Your Teeth
- How to Dress for Snowy Weather (includes both a long and a short version as well as a version for warmer climates)
- How to Go to Bed
- How to Make Hot Chocolate
- How to Go to School (includes both a long and a short version)
Other Ideas for Use
You may also:
- Put Velcro dots on the cards and place them in a file folder
- Use the cards to create sequences of just 2 or 3 events for students who need additional support
- Use the booklets for “how to” reading and writing in Kindergarten
- Use the booklets for reading practice with your students who are already reading
- Send the booklets home with students for additional sequencing or reading practice at home
300+ pages of printable sequencing cards and booklets to help your preschool, pre-k, or kindergarten students develop sequencing skills.


