Chapter 3 : Comparing Numbers

Comparing Numbers — For Hearing Impaired Students (Ages 4–6)

Free learning material provided by Udgam Welfare Foundation. Simple visuals, clear signs (<, >, =) and step-by-step explanations.

What is Comparing Numbers?

We look at two groups and see which group has more, less, or the same number. Use the symbols > (greater than), < (less than), and = (equal).

Group A
Group B
Symbols: > more, < less, = equal

SECTION A — Comparing Numbers (Solved Examples)

Below are 10 solved questions with visual pictures and explanations. Each question shows two groups — count and compare.

1. Which is greater — Group A or Group B?

Group A — 3
Group B — 2
Explanation: Count items in Group A (3) and Group B (2). Since 3 > 2, write 3 > 2. So Group A is greater.

2. Which is less — Group A or Group B?

Group A — 1
Group B — 4
Explanation: Group A has 1 and Group B has 4. Because 1 < 4, Group A is less. We write 1 < 4.

3. Are they equal?

Group A — 2
Group B — 2
Explanation: Both groups have 2 items. They are equal, so write 2 = 2.

4. Compare Group A and Group B

Group A — 5
Group B — 3
Explanation: 5 > 3, so Group A is greater. Write 5 > 3.

5. Which group has fewer?

Group A — 2
Group B — 6
Explanation: Group A has 2, Group B has 6. 2 < 6, so Group A has fewer.

6. Are these equal?

Group A — 2
Group B — 3
Explanation: Group A has 2 items and Group B has 3. So 2 < 3.

7. Which is greater?

Group A — 7
Group B — 5
Explanation: 7 > 5, so Group A is greater.

8. Compare the two groups

Group A — 0
Group B — 1
Explanation: 0 < 1, so Group A has fewer items.

9. Which is greater — 9 or 6?

Group A — 9
Group B — 6
Explanation: 9 > 6, so Group A is greater.

10. Which is equal: 4 ? 4

4
4
Explanation: Same number on both sides. 4 = 4. They are equal.

Practice — 12 Questions (Try these)

Count the items and write <, > or =. After finishing, click Show Answers to check your work.

  1. Group A: 2 stars — Group B: 4 stars. (Write the comparison)
  2. Group A: 5 apples — Group B: 5 apples.
  3. Group A: 0 balls — Group B: 1 ball.
  4. Group A: 3 ducks — Group B: 2 ducks.
  5. Group A: 6 dots — Group B: 9 dots.
  6. Group A: 4 triangles — Group B: 4 triangles.
  7. Group A: 1 banana — Group B: 3 bananas.
  8. Group A: 7 cookies — Group B: 6 cookies.
  9. Group A: 2 flowers — Group B: 2 flowers.
  10. Group A: 8 fish — Group B: 10 fish.
  11. Group A: 3 boxes — Group B: 0 boxes.
  12. Group A: 11 beads — Group B: 11 beads.

Tips for parents / teachers

  • Use the visuals — point to each item while the child counts with fingers or signs.
  • Ask the child to say the number or show the number on fingers before comparing.
  • Reinforce the symbols: show > with the bigger side near the larger number (the ‘mouth’ opens to the bigger group).
Prepared for Udgam Welfare Foundation — Free resource for hearing impaired students. Visit udgamwelfarefoundation.com
Accessibility: SVGs include aria-label where useful, text is large and high-contrast for easy reading.

Ordering Numbers: Smallest → Largest

Grade: Kindergarten – Grade 1 | Age: 4–6 years
This visual lesson helps hearing-impaired students learn how to put numbers from smallest to largest. Use the pictures and arrows — no sound needed.

Free resource — Udgam Welfare Foundation

How to do it (Easy steps)

  1. Look at all the numbers shown.
  2. Find the smallest number first (the one with the least value).
  3. Write the smallest first, then the next bigger, and so on until the largest.

Tip: Use your finger or a pointer to cover numbers from left to right to compare them visually.

SECTION A — Solved Questions (10)

Q1
Question 1: Order these numbers from smallest to largest: 3, 1, 4

Solution: Look for the smallest number. Here the numbers are 3, 1, and 4. The smallest is 1. Next bigger is 3, then 4.

Answer: 1 3 4

Q2
Question 2: Order: 7, 2, 5

Solution: Smallest is 2. Then 5, then 7.

Answer: 2 → 5 → 7

Q3
Question 3: Order: 9, 9, 4

Solution: Two numbers are the same (9 and 9). The smallest is 4, then the two 9s. When numbers repeat, write them both in order.

Answer: 4 → 9 → 9

Q4
Question 4: Order: 0, 6, 2

Solution: The smallest is 0 (zero). Next is 2, then 6.

Answer: 0 → 2 → 6

Q5
Question 5: Order: 10, 3, 8

Solution: Smallest is 3. Then 8. Largest is 10.

Answer: 3 → 8 → 10

Q6
Question 6: Order: 1, 1, 2

Solution: Two 1s and a 2. Smallest is 1, write both 1s, then 2.

Answer: 1 → 1 → 2

Q7
Question 7: Order: 6, 3, 6

Solution: Smallest is 3, then the two 6s.

Answer: 3 → 6 → 6

Q8
Question 8: Order: 4, 7, 1

Solution: The numbers are 4, 7, 1. Smallest is 1, then 4, then 7.

Answer: 1 → 4 → 7

Q9
Question 9: Order: 2, 8, 2

Solution: Two 2s and an 8. Smallest is 2, write both, then 8.

Answer: 2 → 2 → 8

Q10
Question 10: Order: 5, 0, 3

Solution: Smallest is 0, then 3, then 5.

Answer: 0 → 3 → 5

Practice Exercise — Unsolved (12)

Try these on your own. After finishing, click Show Answers to see the solutions at the end.

P1: 4, 2, 6
P2: 9, 1, 7
P3: 3, 3, 5
P4: 0, 2, 1
P5: 8, 4, 8
P6: 6, 2, 9
P7: 7, 7, 0
P8: 5, 2, 5
P9: 1, 4, 2
P10: 10, 2, 10
P11: 3, 0, 3
P12: 2, 5, 4

Design: large numbers, arrows and colors for easy visual learning. All content free for hearing-impaired students. For more resources visit Udgam Welfare Foundation.