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AB Patterns

Kindergarten · Math · Patterns · Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada

Lesson Summary

An AB pattern has two things that take turns, like red-blue-red-blue.

Explanation

An AB pattern is the simplest kind of pattern. Two things switch back and forth. For example: red, blue, red, blue. Or clap, stomp, clap, stomp. The letter A stands for the first thing and B stands for the second thing. Once you learn the rule, you can always tell what comes next.

Practice Questions

Q1: What comes next: red, blue, red, blue, red, ___?
Answer: Blue
Q2: Is cat, dog, cat, dog an AB pattern?
Answer: Yes
Q3: Make an AB pattern with the words happy and sad.
Answer: Happy, sad, happy, sad, happy, sad.
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People Also Ask

What is AB Patterns in Kindergarten Math?+

AB Patterns is a lesson in the Patterns chapter of Kindergarten Math. It is part of the Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada school curriculum and covers key concepts that students need to understand at this level.

What grade level covers AB Patterns?+

AB Patterns is taught in Kindergarten as part of the Math curriculum in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.

How can I help my child with Patterns in Math?+

Start with the lesson summary and explanation on this page. Practice the questions provided, then use TutorTom for personalized, step-by-step help with Patterns topics.

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