Color Shapes activity sheet for young learners to identify and color basic geometric shapes.
Color Shapes worksheet for preschoolers featuring a grid of geometric shapes in different colors and a "Free on TeachersMag.com" label.
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Logic Worksheets With Shapes for Kindergarten Students ...
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Logic Worksheets With Shapes for Kindergarten Students ...
Let’s solve this step by step.
We are looking at a grid with 4 rows and 3 columns. Each row has three shapes: one on the left, one in the middle, and one on the right.
The goal is to figure out what shape should go in the empty spot — which is the bottom-left corner (row 4, column 1).
Let’s look at each column separately to find the pattern.
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Column 1 (Left Column):
Row 1: Blue triangle
Row 2: White triangle (outline)
Row 3: Yellow triangle
Row 4: ??? → This is the missing one
All shapes in Column 1 are triangles! So the missing shape must also be a triangle.
Now let’s check colors or fill style:
- Row 1: Filled blue
- Row 2: Outline (white inside)
- Row 3: Filled yellow
- Row 4: ???
Looking at the pattern of fill styles: Filled → Outline → Filled → ?
It seems like it alternates: Filled, Outline, Filled, so next should be Outline.
Also, color? The filled ones are blue and yellow — no clear repeating color pattern. But since row 2 was outline, and we’re following the fill pattern, row 4 should be outline too.
So for Column 1, Row 4: Outline triangle
Wait — but let’s double-check other columns to make sure our logic holds.
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Column 2 (Middle Column):
Row 1: White square (outline)
Row 2: Red square (filled)
Row 3: Yellow square (filled)
Row 4: Blue square (filled)
Hmm… not alternating clearly. Let’s see if there’s another pattern.
Actually, maybe the pattern isn’t per column — maybe it’s per row?
Let’s try looking at rows instead.
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Row 1:
Triangle (blue), Square (outline), Circle (blue)
→ Two blue shapes, one outline.
Row 2:
Triangle (outline), Square (red), Circle (red)
→ One outline, two red.
Row 3:
Triangle (yellow), Square (yellow), Circle (outline)
→ Two yellow, one outline.
Row 4:
Triangle (???), Square (blue), Circle (green)
We need to find the triangle here.
Looking at the pattern across rows:
Each row has:
- Two shapes of the same color (or fill type?)
- One different (often outline)
In Row 1: two blue, one outline
In Row 2: two red, one outline
In Row 3: two yellow, one outline
In Row 4: we have blue square and green circle — different colors. So maybe the triangle should match one of them? Or be outline?
Wait — perhaps the “different” one is always the outline?
In Row 1: circle is blue (same as triangle), square is outline → so square is the odd one
In Row 2: triangle is outline, others are red → triangle is odd
In Row 3: circle is outline, others are yellow → circle is odd
In Row 4: square is blue, circle is green — both filled, different colors. So maybe the triangle should be outline to be the “odd one”?
That fits the pattern: each row has exactly one outline shape.
Row 1: square is outline
Row 2: triangle is outline
Row 3: circle is outline
Row 4: ??? → should be the outline one → so triangle should be outline.
Yes! That makes sense.
So in Row 4, the triangle should be an outline triangle, because every row has exactly one outline shape, and in Row 4, the square and circle are both filled (blue and green), so the triangle must be the outline one.
Also, from Column 1, we saw that all are triangles, and the fill pattern was Filled, Outline, Filled, so next should be Outline — which matches.
Therefore, the missing shape is an outline triangle.
Final Answer:
An outline triangle (white inside, black border)
We are looking at a grid with 4 rows and 3 columns. Each row has three shapes: one on the left, one in the middle, and one on the right.
The goal is to figure out what shape should go in the empty spot — which is the bottom-left corner (row 4, column 1).
Let’s look at each column separately to find the pattern.
---
Column 1 (Left Column):
Row 1: Blue triangle
Row 2: White triangle (outline)
Row 3: Yellow triangle
Row 4: ??? → This is the missing one
All shapes in Column 1 are triangles! So the missing shape must also be a triangle.
Now let’s check colors or fill style:
- Row 1: Filled blue
- Row 2: Outline (white inside)
- Row 3: Filled yellow
- Row 4: ???
Looking at the pattern of fill styles: Filled → Outline → Filled → ?
It seems like it alternates: Filled, Outline, Filled, so next should be Outline.
Also, color? The filled ones are blue and yellow — no clear repeating color pattern. But since row 2 was outline, and we’re following the fill pattern, row 4 should be outline too.
So for Column 1, Row 4: Outline triangle
Wait — but let’s double-check other columns to make sure our logic holds.
---
Column 2 (Middle Column):
Row 1: White square (outline)
Row 2: Red square (filled)
Row 3: Yellow square (filled)
Row 4: Blue square (filled)
Hmm… not alternating clearly. Let’s see if there’s another pattern.
Actually, maybe the pattern isn’t per column — maybe it’s per row?
Let’s try looking at rows instead.
---
Row 1:
Triangle (blue), Square (outline), Circle (blue)
→ Two blue shapes, one outline.
Row 2:
Triangle (outline), Square (red), Circle (red)
→ One outline, two red.
Row 3:
Triangle (yellow), Square (yellow), Circle (outline)
→ Two yellow, one outline.
Row 4:
Triangle (???), Square (blue), Circle (green)
We need to find the triangle here.
Looking at the pattern across rows:
Each row has:
- Two shapes of the same color (or fill type?)
- One different (often outline)
In Row 1: two blue, one outline
In Row 2: two red, one outline
In Row 3: two yellow, one outline
In Row 4: we have blue square and green circle — different colors. So maybe the triangle should match one of them? Or be outline?
Wait — perhaps the “different” one is always the outline?
In Row 1: circle is blue (same as triangle), square is outline → so square is the odd one
In Row 2: triangle is outline, others are red → triangle is odd
In Row 3: circle is outline, others are yellow → circle is odd
In Row 4: square is blue, circle is green — both filled, different colors. So maybe the triangle should be outline to be the “odd one”?
That fits the pattern: each row has exactly one outline shape.
Row 1: square is outline
Row 2: triangle is outline
Row 3: circle is outline
Row 4: ??? → should be the outline one → so triangle should be outline.
Yes! That makes sense.
So in Row 4, the triangle should be an outline triangle, because every row has exactly one outline shape, and in Row 4, the square and circle are both filled (blue and green), so the triangle must be the outline one.
Also, from Column 1, we saw that all are triangles, and the fill pattern was Filled, Outline, Filled, so next should be Outline — which matches.
Therefore, the missing shape is an outline triangle.
Final Answer:
An outline triangle (white inside, black border)
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of kindergarten logic worksheet.