Sei sulla pagina 1di 15

Mathematics for Grade 4 Teachers

I. UNDERSTANDING NUMBERS BETTER


A. a. Read each of the following numbers. b. Give the place value and the value of the
underlined digit. c. What place does 0 hold in each number?
1. 504 556 4. 473 025 7. 8 606 10. 263 087 674
2. 380 485 5. 672 348 033 8. 65 097 11. 650 947 562
3. 750 453 6. 460 345 364 9. 334 907 12. 67 034 658
B. Write each of the following numbers in figures.
1. eight hundred fifty-six 5. one thousand seventy-nine
2. ninety-seven 6. five thousand two hundred three
3. ten thousand eighty-seven 7. fifteen thousand one
4. nine hundred twenty-nine 8. fifty-six thousand eighty-five
9. five million, four hundred sixty thousand four hundred twenty-five
10. forty-two million, thirty-six thousand, nine hundred thirty-eight
C. Write the following Roman numerals in figures.
1. LXIV _______ 2. LXIX _______ 3. LXXII _______ 4. XLXIX _______
5. CXLXVI ______ 6. XCIII ______ 7. CLX _______ 8. CCLXXXV ______
D. Can you answer the following?
1. What is the smallest two-digit number in our system? ________
2. What is the largest two-digit number? ____________
3. Using any of the digits 0, 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9 only once for each,
a. What is the smallest 3-digit number that you can make? ___________
b. What is the smallest 4-digit number that you can make? ___________
c. What is the largest 3-digit number that you can make? ___________
d. What is the largest 4-digit number that you can make? ___________
e. What is the largest 3-digit number less than 600? __________
f. What is the smallest 4-digit number greater than 5000? ___________
4. In 34,540, how many times as great is the underlined 4 than the other 4?
____________ What about in 467,824? __________
E. Find the pattern of the sequence. Fill in the missing numbers.
1. 18, 25, 32, 39, ____, ____, ____ 2. 101, 212, 323, ____, ____, ___
3. 12, 24, 48, 96, ____, ____, ____ 4. _____, _____, 37, 46, 55, 64
F. Find the number.
1. What is the largest nine-digit number without a digit repeated?
2. Counting my digits, you will find eight. All are zeros except one 8. What number am I?
3. Write the smallest number with the digit 6, 8, 9, 7, 5, 4.
4. Write the smallest even number with the digits 1, 1, 2, 9, 7?
5. What is the smallest odd /even number greater than 40,000 containing the digits
5, 4, 4, 4, 1

1
G. Round each number as indicated.
Nearest 10 Nearest 100 Nearest 1 000 Nearest 10 000
1. 35 782 - __________ ___________ _____________
______________
2. 42 938 - __________ ___________ _____________ ______________
3. 26 899 - __________ ___________ _____________ ______________
4. 59 701 - __________ ___________ _____________ ______________
5. 798 846 - __________ ___________ _____________ ______________
H. Answer the following.
1. What number is halfway between the following?
a. 6 000 and 7 000 __________ c. 0 and 100 __________
b. 4 000 and 5 000 __________ d. 18 000 and 19 000 __________
2. What is the greatest and the least number that would produce the following when
rounded to the nearest hundred?
LEAST GREATEST LEAST GREATEST
a. 4 300 __________ ___________ b. 9 800 __________ ___________
27 368 = 20 000 + 7 000 + 300 + 60 + 8
= (2 x 10 000) + (7 x 1 000) + (3 x 100) + (6 x 10) + (8 x 1)
= (2 x 104) + (7 x 103) + (3 x 102) + (6 x 101) + (8 x 100)
I. Write the standard notation for each.

1. 4 x 104 = _______________ 3. 5 x 102 = _______________

2. 5 x 103 = _______________ 4. 9 x 108 = _______________

5. (9 x 105) + (5 x 104) + (2 x 102) + (10 x 101) + (4 x 100) = ______

6. (8 x 107) + (13 x 105) + (4 x 103) + (6 x 102) + (9 x 100) = ______

J. Find the answers.


1. About 6 x 103 babies are born every day in a city. How many babies are born each day?

2. If there were 8 x 104 orange trees and 7 x 103 apple trees in an orchard, how many
fruit trees were there in all?
3. A supervisor of a supermarket took inventory of their canned goods. The store was
found to have 4 x 102 cans of sardines, 3 x 103 cans of tomato sauce and 5 x 102
cans of milk. How many canned goods did the supermarket have?
Challenge!
1. Rounding me to the nearest hundred makes me 500. Rounding me to the nearest
ten makes me 540. The sum of my digits is 12. What number am I?
2. Rounding me to the nearest thousand makes me 6000. The sum of my digits is 14.
If you read me forward or backward, I am still the same. What number am I?
3. Eric is helping his grandmother in their store. A girl came to buy a sandwich worth
12.75 and gave Eric 13.00. Eric can use 5 ¢, 10 ¢ and 25 ¢ to give the change.
One way is to give her one 25 ¢. What are the other ways Eric can give the change?
4. During a trip to Tagaytay, the driver made a 90-mile trip averaging 45 km per hour.
On the return trip, he averaged 30 km per hour. What was his average for the
whole trip?

2
5. If we count by 4s starting with 1, the following sequence is formed: 1, 5, 9, 13,
17, ... What is the 50th number of the sequence?
II. UNDERSTANDING MORE ABOUT THE BASIC OPERATIONS

A. Find each sum. How many can you do mentally?

a b c d e f g h i j k l

1. 34 56 25 43 56 64 25 36 46 97 68 78
+ 54 + 42 + 27 + 39 + 27 + 45 + 74 + 89 + 68 + 76 + 57 +69

2. 78 45 59 72 67 93 84 95 61 72 86 75
- 36 - 23 - 37 - 45 - 28 - 67 - 39 - 68 - 39 - 37 - 59 - 36

3. 25 34 62 46 28 64 68 58 95 57 63 48
x 6 x 6 x 7 x 5 x 7 x 8 x 9 x 5 x 4 x 7 x 7 x 8

___ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____
4. 3)66 6)96 5)95 7)91 7)125 5)168 8)248 8)396 6)455 9)405

B. How fast can you complete the pattern?

38 26 29 21 24 37
14 13
C. Find the numbers asked for.

1. What is 17 more than the sum of 19 and 15?

2. What is 10 more than the product of 6 and 22?

3. Subtract 25 from the sum of 113 and 38.

4. Fifty more than the quotient of 155 divided by 5 is _______.

5. Divide the result of #4 by 9.

6. How many even numbers are there from 11 to 89?

7. What is the largest 2-digit prime number less than 100?

8. How many prime numbers are there between 20 and 100?

9. What is the smallest/largest 3-digit odd number?

10. What is the sum of the smallest 5 prime numbers?

11. What is the remainder when 3456 is divided by 27?

12. 5 more than the sum of twice 12 and 17 is equal to what number?

13. Thrice 16 plus 200 minus 80 equals what number?

14. 1724 deducted from the product of 4200 and 60 will give what number?

15. 123 added to the quotient of 294 divided by 7 will result in what number?
3
D. Find the answer to each problem.

1. Two of the highest mountains in the Philippines are Mt. Apo in Mindanao which is
2 953 meters high and Mt. Pulog in Luzon which is 2 930 meters high. How many
meters higher is Mt. Apo than Mt. Pulog?
2. The distance around the earth is 39,844 km. Records show that one Arctic tern flew
half this distance in one year. How far did it fly?
3. The library has 4 893 books. As of last week, 2 863 books were borrowed. This
week, 1791 books were returned, while 2 035 books were borrowed. How many
books are now in the shelves?
4. During the year, 10,000,000 computers were manufactured in the United States. If
factory workers worked for 52 weeks, 5 days a week, and 8 hours a day, about how
many computers were produced in a week, in a day, in an hour?
5. The length of a spread of a newspaper is about 70 cm. If 25 spreads were placed
end to end, how far would they reach?
6. A piece of candy costs 65 centavos. How many pieces of candy can Francis buy with
his 15? How much will he have left?
E. Find the two numbers satisfying the given conditions.
1. product is 44 and sum is 15 6. product is 42 and sum is 13
2. product is 20 and sum is 12 7. product is 30 and sum is 13
3. product is 63 and sum is 16 8. product is 56 and sum is 18
4. product is 48 and sum is 26 9. product is 0 and sum is 23
5. product of 24 and sum is 25 10. product is 1 and sum is 2
F. Who am I? Write the number.
1. No matter what number you multiply me by, I will always be the product.
2. When you multiply me by any number, the product will be that number?
3. When you multiply me by myself, you will see me again when you add the two digits
of the product.
4. When you multiply me by 7, you will see me again when you add the two digits of
the product.
5. The sum of my 6 digits is 28. Three of them are the same. Rounding me to the
nearest ten, hundred, and thousand will give you the same number.
Challenge!
1. A grandfather clock strikes once at 1:00, twice at 2:00, and so on for every hour.
How many times does the clock strike in (a) 12 hours? (b) 24 hours?
2. Roda left the book she is reading open at a certain page such that the sum of the
facing page numbers is a. 157 b. 421. c. 703.
To which pages will she resume reading?
3. The houses of Ogie and Steve are 60 km apart. The house of Mar is between them. If
the distance from Ogie's to Mar's is four times the distance from Mars's to Steve's,
how far is it from Ogie's house to Mar's house? and from Mar's house to Steve's
house?
4. When 267 is added to 122, no regrouping is needed. How many different three-digit
numbers can you add to 122 without having to regroup?
5. The sum of two numbers is 87. Their difference is 13. What is their product?

4
6. Forty-two students took a final exam on which the passing score was 72 to the
nearest whole number. The mean score of those who passed was 76 and those who
failed was 66. How many students passed? failed?
7. I have twenty 1 coins, twelve 25 ¢ coins and six 5 coins.
a. What is the smallest cost of an item that I can pay for?
b. What is the largest cost of an item that I can pay for?
c. What other costs of items can I pay for?
III UNDERSTANDING DIVISIBILITY, PRIMES, GCF & LCM BETTER

A. Divisibility

Use divisibility tests to determine if each number in the table is divisible by each of
the numbers at the top row. Put a check in the appropriate column and row.
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1. 4320
2. 2520
3. 5040
4. 3960
5. 4860

B. Prime and composite numbers

From the 100-table, 1 and all multiples of 2 and 5 have been removed. If all
multiples of 3 and 7 are removed, why are the remaining numbers all primes?

2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 21 23 27 29

31 33 37 39 41 43 47 49 51 53 57 59

61 63 67 69 71 73 77 79 81 83 87 89

91 93 97 99

C. Express each number as a product of prime factors

1. 46 3. 56 5. 369 7. 572 9. 1450


2. 84 4. 78 6. 144 8. 1360 10. 6425

D. Find the smallest positive numbers whose factors are:

1. 2, 11, 3, 5 3. 13, 5, 2, 3 5. 23, 33, 7

2. 5, 5, 3, 3 4. 17, 2, 7, 3 6. 52, 32, 2

E. Find the GCF and LCM of each set of numbers.

1. 15, 36 2. 10, 6, 12 3. 16, 24, 12 4. 12, 15, 20


5. 36, 42, 84 6. 42, 84 7. 72, 96 8. 84, 124

F. 1. Give three fractions equal to:

a. 3/5 b. 5/9 c. 8/13 d. 7/11

2. Reduce each to its lowest terms.

a. 16/20 b. 18/27 c. 24/32 d. 56/84 e. 60/90

3. Change the following to improper fractions.


5
a. 4 1/3 b. 8 3/4 c. 9 2/3 d. 8 5/7 e. 6 7/13

f. 3 3/5 g. 7 3/5 h. 8 2/5 i. 7 3/4 j. 8 4/7

4. Reduce to integers or mixed numbers.

a. 9/4 b. 12/3 c. 22/5 d. 28/8 e. 24/5 f. 25/4

g. 47/7 h. 52/4 i. 67/8 j. 52/25 k. 91/18 l. 735/57

G. Write <, > or = on the space provided for.

1. 18/23 ____ 15/23 3. 7/9 ____ 9/11 5. 12/17 ____ 17/23

2. 16/21 ____ 17/21 4. 7/8 ____ 13/15 6. 14/19 ____ 18/25

H. Write the answer as a mixed number with the fraction in lowest terms.

1. Darwin cut some oranges in half. After eating some pieces, he had 15 halves on the
table. How many oranges were left?

2. Joy cut some apples in fourths and thirds. She has 12 pieces of thirds and 12
pieces of fourths on the table. How many apples did she cut in all?

3. Mother cut pizzas into sixths. After serving 28 pieces, she had 12 left. How many
pizzas did she cut?

4. Melissa bought oranges and apples. One half of the fruits were oranges. If she gave
two-thirds of the oranges to her brother what part of the fruits bought by Melissa
did she give her brother?

5. A farmer sold 3/5 of his land, and then he had 15 3/4 hectares left. How much land
had he at first?

6. How many pieces of ribbon 3 1/5 dm long can be cut from a piece 12 meters long.

Challenge!

A. 1. Tom had between 10 and 28 marbles. One half of his marbles were green. The
rest were red or blue. Julius traded 3 of his red marbles for 3 of Tom’s green ones.
Now only 1/3 of Tom's marbles are green. How many marbles did Tom have?

2. A school bus can carry 55 children. The bus picks up 1 child at the first stop. At the
second stop it picks up 2 children. At the third stop it picks up 3 children, and so
forth. After how many stops will the bus be full?

3. Archie gave Betty 1/2 of his peanuts. Betty gave Jughead 1/2 of the peanuts she
got from Archie. Jughead gave Ronnie 1/2 of the peanuts he got from Betty. Ronnie
got only 6 peanuts. How many peanuts did Archie have at first?

4. What different digits can you place in the blank so that:

a. 345____6 b. 345____5 c. 345____4 is divisible by 3?

5. Can you give other numbers that can be completed by each of the patterns in a, b
and c?

B. 1. Rita can put her stamps either 12 or 15 to a page without any left over. What is
the least number of stamps that she can have?

6
2. The product of 4 consecutive whole numbers is 1 less than (991) 2. What are the four
numbers?
3. In a classroom, chairs are arranged so that each row has the same number of
chairs. If Rose sits 3rd from the front, 5th from the back; 4th from the left and 3rd
from the right, how many chairs are there?

4. Find the ones digit of each of the following. a. 234 b. 287 c. 345 d. 388
e. 755 f. 797
IV. UNDERSTANDING ABOUT FRACTIONS BETTER
A. Find the missing terms to get fractions equal to the given.
1. 3/4 = /16 4. 2/3 = 50/ 7. 8/12 = /3 10. 7/8 = 28/
2. 7/9 = 21/ 5. 24/18 = 4/ 8. 7/10 = /70 11. 36/60 = 3/
3. 5/6 = /18 6. 12/17 = 36/ 9. 25/100 = /300 12. 40/25 = /10
B. Write each fraction in lowest terms.
1. 16/18 = 4. 35/70 = 7. 9/30 = 10. 10/40 =
2. 15/60 = 5. 12/15 = 8. 72/100 = 11. 6/21 =
3. 14/32 = 6. 36/40 = 9. 30/45 = 12. 24/36 =
C. Change each to an improper fraction.
1. 3 2/3 2. 4 3/4 3. 2 5/6 4. 5 5/6 5. 6 4/5 6. 7 3/6
D. Change each to a mixed number.
1. 15/6 2. 18/7 3. 17/7 4. 19/6 5. 24/5 6. 45/7
E. Compare the fractions by writing >, <, or = on the blanks.
1. 7/9 ____ 7/10 4. 2/3 ____ 3/5 7. 7/11 ____ 4/6
2. 27/57 ____ 29/57 5. 11/14 ____ 19/21 8. 18/21 ____ 6/7
3. 8/9 ____ 9/10 6. 23/24 ____ 11/22 9. 11/14 ____ 13/17
F. Arrange the fractions from the least to the greatest.
1. 2/3, 3/4, 4/5 ,5/6 3. 3/4, 6/10, 5/8, 4/6
2. 8/9, 5/6, 1/3, 3/4 4. 3/5, 17/30, 8/15, 15/35
G. Do the indicated operations.
1. 4/7 + 3/7 = ________ 6. 2/5 x 15 = ________
2. 11 2/5 + 10 3/8 = ______ 7. 3/4 x 2 1/4 x 4/2 = ________
3. 6 3/5 - 4 1/10 = ________ 8. 1 7/10 x 3 2/5 = ________

4. 4 - 3 3/8 = ________ 9. 5 2/7 ÷ 39/49 = ________

5. 10 4/7 - 7 15/42 = ________ 10. 2 5/6 ÷ 34 = ________


H. Find the answer.
1. There are 24 hours in a day. You spend an average of 8 hours sleeping. What
fraction of the day do you sleep? What fraction of the day are you awake?
2. Liza planted 4/5 of her garden with pechay. How many tenths of the garden are
planted with pechay?
7
3. There are 24 cookies in a box. Allan has 35 cookies. How many boxes of cookies
does he have?
4. Jan had a board that is 50 cm long. He cut it into 8 pieces of the same length. How
long is each piece?
5. Jolie knocked down 3/5 of the bowling pins on his first try. Ernie knocked down
4/10 of the bowling pins on his first try. Who knocked down more bowling pins?
Why?
6. Fifty votes were cast in a class election. Mercy got 1/5 of the votes. Flor got as many
votes as Julia and Meredith put together. Meredith got 1/3 as many votes as Julia.
How many votes did each candidate receive?

7. Martin left his house at 4:15 P.M. He walked for 2/3 of an hour, ran for 1/2 that
time, and then jogged for 1/4 of an hour. What time was it when he finished?

8. There are 42 students in Miss Clare's class. Two-sevenths of the students are girls.
Three-fourths of the boys wear glasses. How many boys do not wear glasses?

9. Elmer ran a certain distance in 5 1/2 minutes. A horse ran the same distance in
1/2 the time. How many minutes did it take the horse to run the same distance?

10. Mike is 1 1/2 years old. Alex is 1 1/3 times Mike's age. Sarah is 2 times Mike's
age, and Rosie is 1 1/6 times Sarah's age. How old is each person?

11. Jerry can walk to the municipal hall in 1/4 hour. If he walks back and forth for
one hour, how many round trips would he make?

12. Linda has 2 1/2 sheets of red paper. She uses 1/4 sheet to make a triangle. How
many triangles can she make?

13. A volleyball team practiced for 3 1/2 hours. After each 1/2 hour, the players
rested. How many times did the players rest?

14. A shelf is 32 2/3 cm long. How many books 2 1/3 cm thick will fit in the shelf?

15. A piece of rope, 14 1/3 m long, is cut into 5 equal parts. How long is each piece?

16. If Ethel answered 13/15 of every quiz correctly, how many points did she get if the
total points of the quizzes is 75?

17. Which two numbers give a difference of exactly 1?


3/5 3/11 3/2 3/6 3/4 3/8

Challenge!
1. Dexter had written down two mixed numbers. If he subtracts the smaller from the
larger, the difference is 4 1/9. If he adds the two mixed numbers, the answer is 13.
What are the two mixed numbers?

2. Five boys are running in a race. Ricky is ahead of Roy by 20 m. Harry is behind
Ricky by 10 m. Roy is behind Dennis by 5 m. Edward is ahead of Harry by 5 m. If
the boys finish the race in this order, find out the position where each boy finished.

3. Five people ordered 13 small pizzas. Each pizza was cut into 8 slices. Liza ate twice
as much as Roda. May ate two pieces less than Danny. Eric ate 2 slices of each
pie. If Danny ate 2 3/4 pies, how many pies did each person eat?

8
4. Two thirds of Mrs. Mateo's Grade IV class were boys. There were between 2 and 14
boys. One day twin girls joined the class. Now 3/5 of the students are boys. How
many students are in Mrs. Mateo's class now?

5. There are bicycles and tricycles in a parking lot. If there are 29 wheels, how many
bicycles are there if there are 26 pedals?

6. Five boys are each thinking of a different number. Mike's number is 3,000 more
than Gerry's which is 500 more than Barry's. Larry's number is 2,600 more than
Sam's which is 663. Sam's number is 90 less than Barry's. What is each boy's
number?
V. UNDERSTANDING DECIMALS BETTER

A. 1. Write in figures.
a. three and three tenths ________

b. four and thirty-six hundredths ________

c. ninety-seven and seventy-eight hundredths __________

d. ten thousand five hundred six and forty-one hundredths ________

e. three hundred eighty-seven and twenty-six hundredths _______

2. Make each equality true. Write each decimal as a fraction in lowest terms or a
mixed number with the fraction part in lowest terms.

DECIMAL FRACTION DECIMAL FRACTION DECIMAL FRACTION

a. 0.5 = _____ b. 0.68 = _____ c. _____ = 87/100

d. _____ = 17/10 e. _____ = 3/10 f. 0.375 = _____

g. _____ = 36/100 h. 6.8 = _____ i. _____ = 567/100

j. 0.325 = _____ k. _____ = 374/100 l. 2.625 = _____

m. _____ = 3055/1000 n. 1.25 = _____ o. _____ = 345/1000

3. a. 3.7 is equal to how many tenths? _________


b. 5.21 is equal to how many hundredths? __________________

c. Write (a) and (b) as fractions. _________ _________

4. What is the place value of the underlined digit? Give the answer orally.

a. 3.69 b. 68.2 c. 576.91 d. 153.25 e. 5.24 f. 4.368

g. 1.309 h. 2.417 i. 65.23 j. 84.26 k. 7.567 l. 4.404

5. Perform the indicated operations. How many can you do orally?

a. 3.6 b. 8.05 c. 9.23 d. 89.3 e. 45.7


+ 2.7 + 5.68 + 2.59 + 6.8 + 35.8

f. 9.85 g. 8.80 h. 62.4 i. 78.5 j. 94.8


- 4.37 - 3.45 - 38.5 - 48.9 - 27.5

B. Mystery numbers: how many can you find?


1. I am a number between 5 and 10. My decimal is in tenths. The sum of my digits is
10. What numbers can I be?

9
2. I have both a ones digit and a tenths digit. I am less than 7. One of my digits is 3
greater than the other. What numbers can I be?
3. I am greater than 4 and less than 6. I'm closer to 4 than 6. The sum of my 2 digits is
8. What number am I?
4. I am a number expressed in ones, tenths, and hundredths. The sum of my digits is
15. No digit is greater than 6. What numbers can I be?
5. Rounded to tenths I'm 3.2. Rounded to ones I'm 3. Write three numbers I can be.

6. Rounded up to tenths I'm 4.5. Rounded to ones I'm 4. Write three numbers I could
be.
7. Rounded to tenths I'm 6.4. Rounded to ones I'm 6. Write three numbers I could be.

C. Write the numbers in order from least to greatest.

1. a. I am 0.3 greater than 2.17. b. I am twice 1.5.


c. I am halfway between 2.3 and 2.4.

2. a. I am 0.8 greater than 3.26. b. I am 0.2 less than 5.78.


c. I am 0.7 greater than 4.33.

D. Analyze each problem and then solve it.

1. Linda filled 2.5 boxes with oranges. She filled another 3.25 boxes with apples. How
many boxes did she fill?

2. Elmer weighs 50.45 kilos and his friend Michael weighs 48.85 kilos. How much
more does Elmer weigh than his friend? How much do they weigh together?

3. How many 0.25 kg bags of sugar can be filled from a sack containing 50 kilograms?

4. How many pieces of ribbon each 2.5 dm long can be cut from a spool of ribbon 15 m
long?

5. The perimeter of a triangle is 18 cm, and the lengths of two of its sides are 5.47 cm
and 6.68 cm. Find the third side?

6. Liza bought 6.5 meters of tetoron at 46.50 a meter, 5 meters of Indian head at
44.75 a meter and three zippers at 10.55 each. How much did she spend?

7. Suppose your step is 0.45 m and you make 75 steps a minute, how far is your
house from your school if you take 8 minutes to reach school?

8. The three sides of a triangle measure 5.4 dm, 6.65 dm and 8.85 dm respectively.
What is its perimeter?

9. Ricky ran 6.75 km the first week, 8.2 km the second week and 9.45 km the third
week. About how many km did Ricky run in 3 weeks?

Challenge!!!

1. What is the smallest number that gives a remainder of 1 when it is divided by each
of the following? a. 2 and 3 b. 3 and 5 c. 5 and 7 d. 2, 3, and 5
e. 2, 3, 5, and 7
What is the pattern in the answers?

2. Round each of the following to the nearest 10.


a. 762 b. 976 c. 1257 d. 5344
10
3. How many whole numbers, round to 200 to the nearest 100?

4. Jolina forgot her locker number at school. She remembers that the sum of the digits
of the number is 11 and that the digits are odd numbers. She also knows that
there are 120 lockers. Use this information to find Jolina's locker number.

5. Twin primes are prime numbers that differ by 2. Here are the first two twin
primes. 3 and 5; 5 and 7
(a) Find the next five twin primes.
(b) How many twin primes are there between 1 and 100?
(c) What are the smallest 3-digit twin primes?
________
6. If you triple both 23 and 1,495 in this problem, 2 3)1 4 9 5
how is the answer changed?
VI. UNDERSTANDING RATIO AND PROPORTION BETTER
A. Express each ratio in simplest form. How many can you do orally?
1. 3:6 2. 9:45 3. 6:9 4. 9:12
5. 6:30 6. 26:39 7. 16:24 8. 12:32
9. 36:42 10. 4:24 11. 5:15 12. 20:80
13. 12:24 14. 5:10 15. 15:40 16. 24:36
B. Find the ratio of each of the following.
1. 3 days to 2 weeks 6. 240 meters to 1 kilometer
2. 35 minutes to 1 hour 7. 25 cm to 8 dm
3. 75 cm to 3 meters 8. 30 red balls to 65 green balls
4. 9 months to 2 years 9. 90 seconds to 3 minutes
5. 25 girls to 35 boys 10. 36 hours to 3 days
C. Write the ratios for each of the following.
1. Silas has a collection of 50 toys. He has 24 toy cars but eight are bigger in size. He,
also, has 10 toy soldiers.
Find the:
a. ratio of toy cars to all the toys.
b. ratio of the bigger toy cars to the smaller cars.
c. ratio of toy cars to the other toys.
d. ratio of toy soldiers to the other toys.
e. ratio of toy soldiers to all the toys.
2. Jolie bought a bag of candy of 3 different colors. In a bag, there are 12 red candies,
16 green candies and 18 blue candies.
Find the ratio of: a. red candies to green candies.
b. green candies to blue candies. d. red candies to all candies.
c. red candies to blue candies. e. blue candies to all candies.
D. Express the following as unit rates or the price of one unit.
1. 27 for 3 notebooks 2. 150 students for 3 buses
3. 500 books for 100 students 4. 48 cookies for 6 children
5. 6 tickets for 2 families 6. 90 rotations in 2 minutes
7. 200 centimeters in 2 meters 8. 50 meters in 10 seconds
9. 180 kilometers in 3 minutes 10. 726 words in 3 minutes
E. Solve for the missing term in the proportion.

11
1. 1. 7:4 = 28:n 2. n:15 = 8:3 3. 15:n = 5:12 4. 14:3 = n:48
5. 9:n = 13:26 6. 4:5 = 32:n 7. 4:9 = n:21 8. n:8 = 9:18
F. Solve each problem.
1. If a sandwich sells at 12.25 a piece, milk shake at 7.25 a piece, and an apple at
8.50 a piece, how much will Tess pay if she will buy a sandwich, 2 milk shakes,
and an apple?
2. Romulo has 112.25 in his piggy bank. He also has 327.75 in the bank. If
Romulo has lent 93.65 to Anthony, how much does Romulo have in all?
3. For an hour of TV shows, 8 TV commercials are shown which last about 0.2 minute
each. How long are the commercials for a 3-hour show?
4. Eloy got 96, 93, 94, 92, 88, and 91 on his six arithmetic tests. What was his average
score on the six tests?
5. Dolores's mother baked 8 cakes. Each cake is divided into 12 equal parts. If all
the pieces are to be divided equally between her 4 cousins' families, how many
pieces will each family receive?

6. Michael Jagger, a basketball player averages 18 points per game. At this rate, how
many points can he make in 9 games?

7. If Theresa reads 320 words per minute, how many words can she read in 15
minutes? 20 minutes?

8. In a Metro Manila barangay, there are 2 children for every adult. How many
children are there if there are 578 adults.

9. Miss Passion, an efficient secretary can type 80 words per minute. At this rate,
how long will it take her to type 5,400 words?

10. My grandfather walks at an average rate of 4440 meters per hour. The distance
from our home to our church is about 740 meters. How long will it take my
grandfather to travel this distance?

11. A vendor pays 19.40 for each pineapple and sells each one for 25. If one week
he was able to sell 380 pineapples, how much did he earn?

12. Five friends ordered three pizzas. Each pizza was cut into 8 slices. What is the
greatest number of slices each person can have?

13. Julia has 2- 5 coins, and 2 1-peso coins, while Sophia has 2-25 ¢ and 3- 1 coin.
Do the they have enough money to buy their teacher a rose which costs 15.50?

14. There are 80 fish in an aquarium. There are 5 aquariums in a pet shop. If 125
of the fishes are goldfish, how many are not goldfish?

15. There are 85 rows of cabbages in a field. Each row has 25 cabbages. If 1 546 of the
cabbages are already harvested, how many cabbages still remain?

Challenge!!!

1. Remove 4 sticks and move 1 so that only 4 squares


of the same size remain.

2. A snail is trying to cross the road. Each day it travels 3.5 m in the right direction. At
night, it gets confused and goes 1.5 m in the opposite direction. If the road is 20 m
wide, how long will it take him to cross the road?

3. Express a. 68 b. 36 c. 24 d. 28 e. 34 as the sum of two primes in two different


ways.

12
4. The product of three whole numbers is 1,100. The three numbers have no
common factors in pairs. What are the numbers?

5. A 3-men crew can do a certain job in 3 weeks and 2 days. If we are to hire a 4-men
crew instead, with the same rate as the first crew, how long would it take the 4-
men crew to do the same job? Note: a week contains 6 work days.

6. I have 30 coins consisting of 5 ¢ and 25 ¢ coins. The total value of the coins is
4.10. How many of each coin do I have?

7. The digits of a 2-digit number are interchanged to form a new 2-digit number. If
the difference of the original number and the new number is 36, find all numbers
that satisfy the conditions.

8. A jar filled with water weighs 10 kg. When one-half of the water is poured out, the
jar and remaining water weigh 5 1/4 kg. How much does the jar weigh?

VII. UNDERSTANDING MEASUREMENT BETTER


A. Choose the more reasonable measurement; give the answer orally.
1. length of a pencil 20 dm 20 cm
2. length of a flashlight battery 4 dm 4 cm
3. width of a sidewalk 1m 1 dm
4. height of a building 20 m 20 dm
5. thickness of a book 2 km 2m 2 cm
6. width of a classroom 15 km 15 m 15 cm
7. distance from one city to another 150 km 150 m 150 cm
B. Complete, fill in the missing measurements.
1. 4 km = _______ m 6. 18 km = _______ m 11. 900 cm = _____ m
2. 45 m = _______ cm 7. 12 m = _______ cm 12. 2 cm = _____ mm
3. 7 900 m = ____ km 8. 0.4 L = _____ mL 13. 6.4 kg = _____ g
4. 0.09 km = _____ m 9. 82 945 mL = _____ L 14. 780 g = _____ kg
5. 5,000 m = _____ km 10. 2,000 m = ______ km 25. 60 cm = ______mm
C. What unit of measurement will you use to measure the following.
1. a glass of juice? 11. a drop of water?
2. distance between cities 12. height of a person
3. length of a safety pin 13. length of a car
4. water in a swimming pool? 14. lemonade in pitcher?
5. height of a bus 15. width of a piece of paper
6. glue in a small bottle? 16. coffee in a cup?
D. Solve each problem mentally.
1. Sheldon ran a 7500 m race. Ferdinand ran an 8 km race. Who ran the longer race?
How much longer?
2. Eugene uses an almanac to find the world temperatures. The page is smudged, and
he cannot tell whether the temperature at the North Pole is 40 O C or -40O C. Which
is the more likely temperature? Why?
3. Mr. Lorenzo's lot is 9 m by 11 m. His scale drawing showed dimensions of 18 cm
by 22 cm. What scale did Mr. Lorenzo use?
4. Architect Lupin used a scale of 2 cm: 3 m to make a drawing of the school cafeteria.
The dimensions of the drawing are 20 cm by 16 cm. What are the actual dimensions
of the cafeteria?
13
E. Answer the following. Use  = 3.14 where needed.
1. One side of a flower bed is 25 m long. If the flower bed is shaped like a square, what
is its area? Its perimeter?
3. What is the distance around a circular lagoon which is 12 meters across? 24 meters
across?
4. Genny wants to sew lace on the edges of her blanket. If the blanket is 3 meters long
and 2 meters wide, how many meters of lace does she need?
6. Jose wants to make a rectangular garden with a perimeter of 32.8 m. If the length
is 8.9 m, what should be the width?
8. How many rectangles can have perimeters of 36 cm if dimensions are whole
numbers. Which rectangle has the biggest area?
9. Edgar has a triangular lot in Quezon City. It has a base of 195.5 m and its height is
125.2 m. What is the area of the lot?
10. A square tile whose sides measure 25 cm costs 29.00 each. If Jayvee is tasked to
buy the tiles for a floor that is 2.75 m by 3.5 m, a. how many tiles are needed? b.
how much would all cost?
12. How much milk can be contained in a can with a radius of 3 cm and height of 8 cm?
14. One cylinder has a radius of 10 cm and a height of 8 cm. Another has a radius of
8 cm and a height of 10 cm. Which has the greater volume? By how much?
15. The school's library is 15 m long, 8 m wide, and 4 m high. If the air is changed
completely every 3 minutes, how many cubic meters of the air would move through
the room in one hour?
Challenge!!!
A. 1. Christina needs pieces of ribbon that are 7 cm long. How many can she cut from
a piece of ribbon 7.2 m long?
2. Sheila had to put 14 L of water into a bucket. She used an 8 L bottle and a 3 L
bottle to measure the water. How did she do it?
3. A piece of cloth is rectangular. Its perimeter is 10 m. The length is 4 m. What is the
width? What is the area?
4. How many bags of cement are needed to cover a path 12 m long and 2 m wide if one
bag of cement covers 6 sq. m?
5. Mr. Garcia bought a lot 20 m long and 18 m wide. Mr. Bacani bought another lot 25
m wide and 15 m long. Whose lot is a bigger and by how much?
6. The area of a rectangle is 42 square meters. One side is 6 meters long. How long are
the other 3 sides?
B. 1. How many rectangles of different shapes can you find that have an area of 64
square units? What are the dimensions of each if the length and width are whole
numbers? the length and width can be any numbers?
2. Chester fenced his rectangular garden. The length is 24 m and the width is 15 m.
He used bamboo posts which he placed 1.5 m apart. How many posts did he use?
3. Fifteen 1 peso coins are put into 4 piles so that each pile has a different number of
coins. In how many ways can this be done?
4. Justin has 36 meters of fencing material. How many different rectangular gardens
could he have fencing for?

14
C. 1. Three containers have capacities of three, five, and nine liters. How can you use
these containers to measure exactly seven liters of water? How about 11 liters of
water?
2. To fence the side of his property facing the street, Mr. Flor had planned to use fence
posts placed 2 meters apart. Because of the increase in price of the posts, he
decided to buy 4 fewer posts than planned and to place the posts 3 meters apart.
How many posts did he buy?
3. The squares of a 13 by 13 grid are colored alternately red and white. If the
centermost square is colored white, how many red and white squares are there?
4. Cross out one or more numbers in each row so that the remaining numbers will
have a product equal to the product on the right.
product product
3 5 6 7 8 336 2 5 6 8 9 240
3 5 6 7 8 210 2 5 6 8 9 360
3 5 6 7 8 144 2 5 6 8 9 720
3 5 6 7 8 168 2 5 6 8 9 480

15

Potrebbero piacerti anche