How to Build Critical Thinking Skills in Kindergarten
Critical thinking for kindergarten starts with noticing, explaining, comparing, predicting, and trying another way.
What critical thinking looks like at ages 4–6
For young children, critical thinking is practical and concrete. A child might compare two pictures, explain why one object does not belong, predict what happens next, or notice how a character may be feeling.
The goal is not to rush toward the right answer. The goal is to help the child use clues.
Simple activities that help
- Ask “What do you notice?” before asking for an answer.
- Compare two objects and name one thing that is the same and one thing that is different.
- Sort objects by color, shape, use, or category.
- Ask “Why does your answer make sense?”
- Invite a second possible answer when appropriate.
Parent prompts to try
- “What clue helped you decide?”
- “Could another answer also make sense?”
- “What changed?”
- “What would you try next?”
How ShunyaLearning approaches it
ShunyaLearning packs are designed around short, parent-guided activities. The worksheet gives the child something concrete to look at; the grown-up prompt turns it into a thinking conversation.
Start with the Big Thinking Starter Pack if you want a broad introduction.
Start with printable packs that help kids notice clues, explain answers, and try another way.
Related: Learn how the Big Thinking Method builds reasoning skills · Browse critical thinking printable packs