RIT 131-140 Activities: What to Teach Math and Reading at This Band
Your student tested at RIT 135. Maybe RIT 138. Somewhere in the 131-140 band — early kindergarten territory, plus older students working through significant Tier 3 intervention. Now you need to figure out what to actually teach them this week.
This post is the answer for the 131-140 band specifically. Math AND reading skills broken down to what students at this band are ready to learn next, with activity ideas you can pull tomorrow morning. Built for K-5 teachers and interventionists who already know how to teach and just need the band-by-skill bridge.
The free score tracker linked at the bottom is what most teachers use to keep their group rosters and priority skills straight all year. Grab it before you start planning.

Who’s at RIT 131-140?
This band typically captures two student groups:
- Kindergarten students in the first half of the year. Fall and early winter norms for kindergarten typically land in this band, so K students testing here are exactly where they’re expected to be.
- Students in 1st grade and beyond receiving Tier 3 intervention. Older students testing at this band are working on filling significant foundational gaps, often with special education or intensive intervention support.
Same RIT band, very different grade-level contexts. The skills are identical regardless of grade — which is exactly why band-based grouping works for interventionists pulling across grade levels. A 2nd grader at RIT 135 and a kindergartener at RIT 135 are working on the same foundational skills.
Math Skills at RIT 131-140
Math at this band is the earliest foundational layer. Students are working on representing sets as numerals, basic addition with sums under 5, and beginning to sort and classify. The skill list is genuinely shorter than at higher bands — that’s normal and expected at this developmental level.
Operations & Algebraic Thinking

- Determining basic addition facts (sum less than 5)
Activity ideas for Operations
- Counter manipulatives for every addition problem — students count out the first set, then the second set, then count all together. Concrete first, always.
- Five-frame practice — visual support for understanding combinations to 5
- Picture addition cards — students see “2 fish + 1 fish” and count the total in the picture before writing the answer
- Number bond practice with sums under 5 — students show all the ways to make 4 (1+3, 2+2, 3+1) using counters
Number & Operations

- Representing a given set of objects as a numeral (e.g., 3 dots = “3”)
- Determining basic addition facts (sum less than 5)
Measurement & Data

- Sorting objects into 2 groups (using manipulatives, based on type or size)
- Representing data in a picture graph (horizontal display, using manipulatives, 3 categories)
Geometry

- Understanding location words (“beside” with manipulatives and words shown)
- Identifying a square given four geometric shapes
- Naming a square (manipulatives shown, names of shapes given, real-world objects)
Activity ideas for Measurement & Geometry
- Object sorting bins — students sort buttons, blocks, or pasta into “big” vs. “small” or “red” vs. “blue” piles, then count each pile
- Pictograph favorites — students vote on favorite color or fruit, then build a 3-category picture graph using manipulatives or stickers
- Position word follow-the-leader — give directions like “put the bear beside the cup” using location vocabulary
- Square hunt — students find squares around the classroom (sticky notes, books, tiles) and identify them out loud
Reading and Language Skills at RIT 131-140
Reading at this band is heavily phonics- and print-concepts-driven. Students are working on the very earliest foundational skills — letter-sound correspondence, identifying parts of a book, beginning sight words, and retelling familiar stories with adult support.

Phonics & Foundational Skills
- Identifying parts of a book (front cover, table of contents, title page, title, illustrations)
- Matching letters to beginning sounds of given pictures (f, m, y, v, w, wh, t, r, k)
- Recognizing the letter that makes a given sound (f, t, w)
- Matching digraphs to beginning sounds (ch, sh, wh)
- Blending sounds to form simple words
- Identifying given sight words (can, go, the, and)
- Identifying the letter that makes short o sound
- Identifying sight words in simple sentences (do, have, what)
- Matching given lowercase letters to the same uppercase letter

Activity ideas for Phonics & Foundational Skills
- Daily 2-3 minute letter-sound flashcard drills — start with focus letters of the week and add as students master them
- Beginning sound picture sorts — students sort pictures by which letter they begin with
- Digraph introduction sorts — separate sorting work for ch, sh, wh sounds (these often confuse young learners; introduce one at a time)
- Sight word fluency rings — small flashcard rings with target sight words students review every day with the teacher
- Book parts hands-on — students physically point to and name front cover, table of contents, title page, title, and illustrations in real books
- Upper-to-lowercase letter matching — students match capital letters to their lowercase counterparts using cards or a chart

Reading Literature
- With prompting and support, asking and answering questions about key details in a text
- With prompting and support, retelling familiar stories including key details
- With prompting and support, identifying characters, settings, and major events in a story
- Distinguishing between a real and make-believe character
- Explaining major differences between books that tell stories and books that give information
- With prompting and support, naming the author and illustrator of a story
- With prompting and support, describing the relationship between illustrations and the story; matching an illustration to a story
Reading Informational Text
- With prompting and support, asking and answering questions about key details in a text
- Locating the main idea of a given fictional story; with prompting and support, identifying the main topic and retelling key details
- Identifying parts of a book (front cover, table of contents, title page, title, illustrations)
- With prompting and support, describing the relationship between illustrations and the text
- With prompting and support, identifying the reasons an author gives to support points in a text

Activity ideas for Reading Comprehension
- Read-aloud with question prompts — pause every few pages to ask “who is in this story” or “what just happened”
- Story sequence picture cards — beginning, middle, end cards from a familiar story; students put them in order with adult support
- Real vs. make-believe sorts — students sort character cards into “could really happen” vs. “could not really happen” piles
- Story vs. informational sorts — given simple book covers, students decide which type of book it is and explain how they know (with prompting)
- Author and illustrator scavenger hunts — students find the author’s name and illustrator’s name on the cover and title page of various books
Language Arts

- Recognizing the correct way to print lowercase letters
- Recognizing the correct way to print upper and lowercase letters
- Using frequently occurring nouns and verbs
- Demonstrating understanding of the preposition “under”
- Detecting a sentence written with correct capitalization
- Identifying a period
- Spelling target sight words correctly (a, go, to, it, the, we)
Vocabulary

- Determining or clarifying the meaning of unknown and multiple-meaning words and phrases
- Using frequently occurring inflections and affixes (-ed, -s, re-, un-, pre-, -ful, -less) as a clue to word meaning
- Sorting common objects into categories
- Identifying real-life connections between words and their use
- Classifying pictures into a group (animals, food, things that melt)
- Selecting a synonym for a word in a given sentence (talks, fast, pretty, rabbit)
- Identifying and matching opposites — antonyms (up, stop)
Building a Small Group at RIT 131-140
If you have multiple students in this band, here’s the practical structure for the first month of small group instruction:
Pick ONE priority skill per subject per group
Common high-leverage choices for this band:
- Math: addition facts with sums under 5 (using manipulatives), OR representing sets as numerals (counting and writing the number), OR sorting objects into categories
- Reading: letter-sound matching for the band’s target letters, OR sight word fluency from the band’s target list, OR identifying parts of a book
Three weeks of focused practice on one skill produces more growth than three weeks of touching ten skills lightly.

Frequency and duration
Students at RIT 131-140 typically need 5 sessions per week of 8-12 minutes each. This is the highest-frequency, shortest-duration recommendation in the band sequence — and it reflects two realities. First, foundational skills at this band are the most cumulative; gaps in one week’s work create deeper gaps in the next. Second, young students at this developmental level have the shortest attention spans; 8-12 minutes more often beats 15+ minutes less often.
Materials
Materials at this band need to be visually clean, developmentally appropriate, and heavy on hands-on manipulatives rather than worksheets. For older students working at this band — a 2nd or 3rd grader testing here — the additional concern is finding materials that aren’t visually targeted at very young children. Worksheets with cartoonish kindergarten visuals can shut down an older student’s engagement before they start.
The RIT Intervention System is built around band-organized materials — every worksheet, task card, and intervention pack is sorted by RIT band rather than grade. That means materials labeled “RIT 131-140” rather than “Kindergarten.” For older students working at this band, the difference is significant.
Stop the guessing game….
When parents and teachers see the same roadmap, everything changes for the child in between.

Where This Band Sits in the Bigger Picture
RIT 131-140 sits one band below RIT 141-150, which represents the next major step in foundational kindergarten skill consolidation. Students typically progress out of this band into the 141-150 range as letter-sound automaticity develops and addition within 5 becomes fluent.
For the broader band-by-band context, see the math fluency activities by RIT band and reading fluency activities by RIT band overviews. For interpreting the score that puts students at this band, see how to read a MAP report. For the full index of all K-5 RIT bands, see RIT Band Activities.
Free MAP Score Tracker
The score tracker is a one-page-per-class document with columns for fall, winter, and spring scores plus seasonal goal cards. It includes:
- A roster row per student
- Math and reading columns side by side
- Notes space for priority skills and group placement
- Seasonal goal cards for fall, winter, and spring
- A version formatted for MTSS documentation
Drop your email below and the tracker comes to your inbox.
Frequently Asked Questions
What grade level is RIT 135?
RIT scores don’t translate directly to grade levels. RIT 135 is roughly typical for kindergarten students testing in fall, but the same score means something different for a 1st grader (below the typical range) versus a 3rd grader (well below). The RIT score tells you what skills the student is ready to learn next.
My kindergartener scored RIT 135 — is that good?
For kindergarten testing in fall, RIT 135 is roughly within the typical range. NWEA publishes current grade-level norms — pull the most recent norms document from the NWEA site to compare your child’s score against the percentile, which is the more useful comparison than the RIT number alone.
What’s the best math activity for RIT 135?
The best activity depends on the priority skill you’ve identified. For most groups at this band, the highest-leverage choices are addition facts with sums under 5 (using counters), representing sets of objects as numerals, or sorting objects into categories. Pick one and stay with it for at least three weeks before changing.

My 2nd grader scored RIT 135 — what does that mean?
It means your student is ready to work on skills typical of early-kindergarten norms. For an older student at this band, this typically reflects significant foundational gaps — the kind that benefit from targeted Tier 3 intervention or special education support. The plan is the same as any band: identify the priority skill, work on it consistently, and monitor with quick probes.
How do I write IEP goals for a student at RIT 135?
Tie the goal to a specific skill at this band, not a target RIT score. “Student will identify 8 of 10 letter sounds (f, m, y, v, w, t, r, k) on a probe by winter testing” is measurable. “Student will reach RIT 145 by winter” is a comparison, not a goal — and it depends on factors outside your control.
How does RIT 131-140 differ from RIT 141-150?
RIT 131-140 focuses on the earliest foundational skills — single letter-sound matching, addition with sums under 5, and identifying parts of a book. RIT 141-150 expands to addition within 10, more sight words, blending three sounds to make CVC words, and reading an analog clock to the hour. Students at the upper edge of 131-140 are often ready to begin work from the 141-150 range.

What if my student is at RIT 139 — should I push toward 141-150 skills?
Students at the upper edge of a band can often start working on the next band’s skills, particularly in their stronger domains. Addition facts with sums under 10 (a 141-150 skill) builds directly on the under-5 work students do in 131-140.
How often should I retest students at this band?
The full MAP test runs three times a year — fall, winter, spring. Don’t retest the full MAP between windows. Use quick skill-specific probes every 2 weeks to monitor progress on your priority skill. For young students at this band, a probe might be as simple as showing 10 letter-sound flashcards or counting 10 objects and writing the numeral, and recording how many they get right.
Save This for Planning
Pin this so you have the band-specific skills handy each time you’re building small groups — fall, winter, or spring.

Final Thoughts
RIT 131-140 is the foundational kindergarten band where K students testing in fall overlap with older students filling significant intervention gaps. Same band, two contexts, identical instructional needs. Pick one priority skill per subject. Run 5 short sessions a week given how cumulative early skills are. Monitor with quick probes, not full retests. By winter MAP, you’ll have weeks of practice notes and a clear picture of who’s ready to move up to the next band.
