Springtime in kindergarten means two things: excitement for Easter and a classroom full of energy! One of my favorite ways to channel that excitement into meaningful learning is through jelly bean math. There’s something about using real jelly beans as manipulatives that instantly engages my students and makes math feel like play.
If you’re looking for a way to make math hands-on, engaging, and fun, you’ll love these jelly bean math activities that reinforce counting, comparing, graphing, and more!
Counting on an Easter Egg with Jelly Beans Math Activities
One of the students’ favorite activities is decorating an Easter egg with jelly beans! Each section of the egg gets a different color jelly bean. Once they’ve completed their designs, they count how many of each color they used and record their answers.
✅ What makes it effective?
- Strengthens counting skills, one-to-one correspondence, color words, and number writing
- Provides a visual representation of quantity
- Makes math feel like a creative craft activity!

We also extend the activity to compare numbers and answer questions such as:
- Which color(s) had the most?
- Which color(s) had the least?
- How many jelly beans are there in all?


Comparing Numbers Jelly Bean Math
I also like to do extension math activities with students who need an extra challenge.
After completing their Easter Egg Math pages, students use the data from their decorated jelly bean eggs to complete greater than, less than, and equal to equations. They compare the numbers of different jelly bean colors.
✅ What makes it effective?
- Encourages critical thinking about numbers
- Reinforces the concepts of more, less, and equal
- Helps students build number sense in a fun, hands-on way

Easter Egg Jelly Bean Math Addition Equations
Another extension math activity is having students use their recorded numbers to solve addition equations using jelly beans.
✅ What makes it effective?
- Strengthens addition fluency in a fun, engaging way
- Supports early algebraic thinking in a visual way

Jelly Bean Graphing
For students who need a little extra support with counting and comparing numbers, it is helpful for them to place the jelly beans from their Easter eggs onto a graph. By placing the jelly beans from their Easter eggs onto a graph, they can more easily count each color and clearly see which ones have more or fewer.
Jelly bean graphing is also a simple, effective way for students to count and compare a handful of jelly beans as a separate math activity during small groups or centers. They love looking at the graphs and discussing what they notice—especially when we compare different students’ data!
✅ What makes it effective?
- Builds data interpretation skills
- Introduces students to graphing in a simple way
- Encourages class discussions and math talk

If you’d love to bring these Jelly Bean Math activities into your classroom, but don’t want to spend time making all the recording pages yourself, I’ve got you covered!
My Easter Egg Math resource includes all of these activities with ready-made, print-and-go pages that save you time. Plus, the jelly bean colors are editable, so you can customize them to match whatever jelly beans you’re using!
👉 Click here or on the cover image to check it out!

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