1. The area of Rhode Island is 1545 square miles. Delaware is 2489

Test Name: LAUSD Grade 4 Mathematics
Periodic Assessment Quarter 1 2010-2011
Your Name: __________________________
ReviewScan™ Test Code: 1040111
Teacher: ____________________________
Date: _________________________________
Class Name: _________________________
1. The area of Rhode Island is 1,545 square miles. Delaware is 2,489 square miles and Connecticut
is 5,544 square miles. What is the total area in square miles of these three states?
A 8,578 square miles
B 9,478 square miles
C 9,568 square miles
D 9,578 square miles
2. Kia arranged the tables in a room for a special dinner. She set up 3 tables with 8 chairs and 1
table with 4 chairs.
Which expression shows how many chairs Kia used?
A (3 + 8) × 4
B (3 × 8) + 4
C 3 + (8 × 4)
D 3 × (8 + 4)
Copyright © 2011, Core K12 Education, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
Page 1 of 9
3. Kamiko wrote a problem for homework. The answer to her problem is 33. Which problem did
Kamiko write?
A 3 × (4 + 5) + 6 =
B (3 × 4) + 5 + 1 =
C 2 × 4 + (5 + 6) =
D 3×4+5+6=
4. What is the standard form of the number below?
five million, seventy thousand,
six hundred forty-one
A 57,641
B 5,007,641
C 5,070,641
D 570,600,041
5. The San Diego Zoo has about 4,000 animals when this number is rounded to the nearest
thousand. What number could be the exact number of animals at the San Diego Zoo?
A 3,413
B 4,130
C 4,513
D 4,950
6. 702 – 390 =
A 312
B 392
C 412
D 492
7. Which list of numbers is ordered from least to greatest?
A 2,981, 2,819, 2,198, 2,918
B 2,198, 2,819, 2,918, 2,981
C 2,819, 2,981, 2,918, 2,198
D 2,981, 2,918, 2,819, 2,198
Copyright © 2011, Core K12 Education, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
Page 2 of 9
8. The chart below shows the number of meals served by a restaurant during 4 months.
How many more meals were served in July than in March?
A 289 meals
B 1,389 meals
C 1,729 meals
D 5,809 meals
9. A tomato farm packs 6 tomatoes in each box. There are 105 boxes. How many tomatoes did they
pack?
A 111 tomatoes
B 165 tomatoes
C 630 tomatoes
D 6,030 tomatoes
Copyright © 2011, Core K12 Education, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
Page 3 of 9
10. A parking lot has 4 rows of cars with 7 cars parked in each row. The parking lot also has 6
more cars parked along the side of the lot. Which expression shows how many cars are parked
in the lot?
A (4 + 7) × 6
B (4 + 7) + 6
C 4 + (7 × 6)
D (4 × 7) + 6
11. Medina Valley Elementary School has 1,200 students. The students can either buy a cafeteria
lunch or bring a lunch from home. If 573 students bought a cafeteria lunch one day, how many
students brought their lunch from home that same day?
A 627
B 727
C 1,373
D 1,773
12. Jon bought rolls of stickers. He bought 12 rolls of 24 stickers and 15 rolls of 36 stickers. How
many stickers did he buy?
A 720
B 792
C 828
D 1,620
Copyright © 2011, Core K12 Education, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
Page 4 of 9
13. A restaurant used 39 cans of olives in one day. If there were 54 olives in each can, how many
olives did the restaurant use that day?
A 93
B 351
C 2,106
D 2,206
14.
203
×75
A 278
B 2,436
C 15,015
D 15,225
15. Which expression equals 16?
A (6 + 3) × 4 – 2
B 6 + (3 × 4) – 2
C (6 + 3) × (4 – 2)
D 6 + 3 × (4 – 2)
16. There were 421,906 tickets sold for the summer parade. Which of the following numbers is
closest to the number of tickets sold for the parade?
A 400,000
B 401,000
C 410,000
D 420,000
17. What is the value of the underlined digit?
7,859,213
A 800
B 8,000
C 80,000
D 800,000
Copyright © 2011, Core K12 Education, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
Page 5 of 9
18. A school gym has 425 seats. All the seats are filled for 22 games. How many people saw the
games during this time?
A 447 people
B 1,700 people
C 9,240 people
D 9,350 people
19. About how many students are in the Los Angeles Unified School District?
A 80,000
B 200,000
C 700,000
D 800,000
20.
6,294
× 37
A 180,000
B 232,878
C 459,462
D 629,437
21. How should the parentheses be placed in the expression below, so that the answer is 82?
7×8+4–2
A (7 × 8) + 4 – 2
B (7 × 8) + (4 – 2)
C 7 × (8 + 4) – 2
D 7 × 8 + (4 – 2)
Copyright © 2011, Core K12 Education, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
Page 6 of 9
22. Jill read 2,040 pages. Sammy read 1,825. About how many more pages did Jill read than
Sammy?
A 200
B 1,000
C 1,825
D 3,865
23. What is 1,520,104 written in words?
A one million, fifty-two thousand, fourteen
B one million, five hundred twenty thousand, fourteen
C one million, fifty-two thousand, one hundred four
D one million, five hundred twenty thousand, one hundred four
24. The chart shows the total yearly rainfall a town received during a four-year period.
During which year did the town receive the most rainfall?
A 2005
B 2006
C 2007
D 2008
Copyright © 2011, Core K12 Education, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
Page 7 of 9
25. Which of the following situations requires an exact answer?
A putting some popcorn in a bowl
B guessing the number of raisins in a box
C estimating the number of kids on a playground
D counting the number of students on a bus when coming home from a field trip
26. Molly had 136 trading cards. She gave away 15 to each of her 3 friends. Which expression
shows how many cards Molly has left?
A 136 – (15 × 3)
B 136 + (15 × 3)
C (136 – 15) × 3
D (136 + 15) × 3
27. Mi-Ling was solving this problem on the board during math class.
13 + (4 × 2) – 6 ÷ 3
Which operation should Mi-Ling do first?
A add
B subtract
C multiply
D divide
28. Which is the best estimate for 32 + 473?
A 400
B 440
C 480
D 500
Copyright © 2011, Core K12 Education, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
Page 8 of 9
29. Mr. Hansen’s 4th grade class is collecting labels to earn money for a trip to Griffith Park. The
class has 34 students. If each student collects 43 labels, how many labels will the class have?
A 77 labels
B 238 labels
C 1,362 labels
D 1,462 labels
30. Which statement is true?
A 61,000 < 60,900
B 100,562 < 99,986
C 6,300,000 < 6,400,000
D 8,567,000 < 8,471,000
31. The Central School District is planning a field trip to the aquarium. There are 34 buses that can
be used and each bus has 64 seats.
If there are 1,700 people going on the trip, will there be enough seats for everyone?
Show how to use rounding to solve the problem.
•
Explain whether an estimate tells if there are enough seats without finding an exact
solution. Use words, numbers, or pictures to explain your answer.
•
Copyright © 2011, Core K12 Education, L.L.C. All rights reserved.
Page 9 of 9