Name Date Practice P l a c e Va l u e t o T h o u s a n d s W r i t e t h e p l a c e o f t h e u n d e r l i n e d d i g i t . T h e n w r i t e i t s va l u e . ones 3 2. 277,725 hundred thousands 200,000 3. 412,871 thousands 2000 4. 808,011 ten thousands 0 1. 12,843 W r i t e t h e v a l u e o f 6 i n e a c h n u m b e r. 5. 102,624 600 6. 600,051 600,000 7. 96,877 6000 8. 820,206 6 9. 233,565 60 60,000 10. 162,911 W r i t e t h e nu m b e r i n s t a n d a rd fo r m . 11. seventy-two thousand, four hundred eighty-one 72,481 12. fifty thousand, nine hundred six 50,906 13. two hundred five thousand, thirty 205,030 14. three hundred forty-six thousand, five hundred 346,500 15. four hundred thousand, eight 400,008 16. eight hundred thousand, two hundred one 800,201 W r i t e t h e w o r d n a m e f o r e a c h n u m b e r. 17. 4526 four thousand, five hundred twenty-six 18. 832,040 eight hundred thirty-two thousand, forty 19. 56,009 20. 111,914 fifty-six thousand, nine one hundred eleven thousand, nine hundred fourteen PR O B L E M S O LVING 21. The population of San Antonio, Texas in 1990 was 935,393. What is the value of the digit 5 in this number? 22. In 1970 San Francisco, California had a population of 715,674. What is the place of the digit 1 in this number? What is its value? Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 5000 ten thousands; 10,000 U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 1. 1P Name Date Practice A dd a n d S u b t r a c t F r a c t i o n s : L i k e D e n o m i n a t o rs U s e f r a c t i o n s t r i p s o r nu m b e r l i n e s t o m o d e l e a ch s u m o r d i f ference . T h e n w r i t e a n a d d i t i o n o r s u b t r a c t i o n s e n t e n c e s h o w i n g t h e s u m i n s i m p l e s t fo r m . 1. 7 –– 14 7 –– 14 3 –– 14 5 3 –– –– –– 14 10 7 14 2. 1 –– 3 1 –– 3 1 –– 3 1 2 –– –– 3 3 5 1 3. –– –– 6 6 5 –– 6 2 1 4 –– –– –– 3 6 6 4. 5 –– 9 2 –– 9 5 –– 9 1 2 3 –– –– –– 3 9 9 5 4 –– –– 5. 10 10 5 –– 10 4 9 –– –– 10 10 6. 2 –– 6 3 –– 6 2 –– 6 3 5 –– –– 6 6 3 1 7. –– –– 4 4 3 –– 4 1 1 2 –– –– –– 2 4 4 8. 11 –– 12 2 3 8 –– –– 12 12 –– 3 3 –– 11 –– 12 3 –– 10 11. 5 –– 12 6 –– 12 14. 4 –– 6 2 –– 6 12 A dd o r s u b t r a c t . 2 2 9. –– –– 5 5 4 –– 5 10. 1 –– 10 2 –– 10 2 1 12. –– –– 3 3 1 –– 3 13. 9 –– 10 5 –– 10 3 –– 7 15. 2 –– 7 2 –– 10 11 –– 12 22. 5 –– 12 6 –– 12 17. 1 –– 10 5 –– 7 21. 1 –– 10 16. 1 –– 2 1 –– 5 3 –– 5 23. 4 –– 9 18. 4 –– 10 2 –– 5 1 –– 5 19. 1 –– 12 11 –– 12 2 –– 6 1 –– 5 4 –– 12 –– 8 8 –– 9 2 –– 5 5 –– 12 5 –– 8 24. 7 –– 8 25. 8 –– 9 5 2 –– –– 5 1 –– 8 2 –– 9 1 –– 5 3 –– 5 5 –– 8 2 –– 9 Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 3 4 –– 8 20. 4 –– 9 4 –– 5 1 –– 1 5 –– 10 26. 6 3 –– 10 2 –– 10 U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 10. 1 –– 5 10P Name Date Practice Te n t h s a n d H u n d r e d t h s W r i t e a f r a c t i o n a n d a d e c i m a l fo r e a ch . 1. 2. 3. 3 –– 10 8 –– 10 0.3 0.8 4. 54 ––– 100 0.54 7 ––– 100 0.07 Write as a decimal. 5. 4 –– 10 0.4 9. 75 ––– 100 0.75 6. 7 –– 10 7. 0.7 6 ––– 1 0 . 100 2 –– 10 12 ––– 1 1 . 100 0.06 8. 0.2 3 –– 10 0.3 2 ––– 1 2 . 100 0.12 0.02 W r i t e t h e d e c i m a l i n s t a n d a rd fo r m . 13. three tenths 0.3 14. six tenths 0.6 15. nine hundredths 0.09 16. twelve hundredths four tenths 18. 0.2 0.12 W r i t e t h e wo rd n a m e fo r e a ch d e c i m a l . two tenths 17. 0.4 19. 0.05 five hundredths 20. 0.08 eight hundredths 21. 0.76 seventy-six hundredths 22. 0.18 eighteen hundredths W r i t e a n e q u i va l e n t d e c i m a l . 23. 0.5 24. 0.60 0.50 0.6 25. 0.9 0.90 26. 0.20 0.2 C o m p a r e . W r i t e <, ⴝ,, o r >. 27. 0.30 > 0.03 28. 6 ––– 100 < Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 0.6 29. 0.8 = 0.80 U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 11. 11P Name Date Practice Geometric Concepts Identify each f i g u r e . T h e n n a m e i t u s i n g s y m b o l s . 1. 2. 3. C B 4. E D G A H F line line line segment line ML AB or ML BA ML CD or ML DC JK or FE JK EF ML or HG ML GH 5. 6. I 7. K 8. O N L P Q M J line segment ray line segment plane J or JI J IJ M L KL ML KL or LK JJ or NM JJ MN plane OPQ W r i t e p a r a l l e l o r i n t e rs e c t i n g f o r e a ch p a i r o f l i n e s . 9. 10. Q S T U 11. V 12. B C W R X P S Y Q T R Z Y intersecting parallel parallel intersecting F i l l i n e a ch bl a n k w i t h a wo rd f ro m t h e g i v e n l i s t . 13. Intersecting lines are lines that intersect at a common point. 14. 15. points A line is a set of infinitely in opposite directions. Parallel that extends lines are lines in the same WORD LIST points parallel endpoints intersecting plane that never intersect. 16. A line segment is part of a line with endpoints two . Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 12. 12P Name Date Practice I d e n t i f y Po l y g o n s D e c i d e i f e a c h f i g u r e i s a p o l y g o n . W r i t e Ye s o r N o . 1. 2. No 5. 3. Yes 6. Yes 9. Yes No 7. No 10. No 4. 8. No Yes 11. No 12. Yes Yes Name each p o ly g o n . 13. 14. quadrilateral 15. triangle 16. pentagon hexagon PR O B L E M S O LVING 17. A polygon has 6 sides and 6 vertices. What is its name? 18. A quadrilateral has 4 angles. How many sides does it have? how many vertices? 19. A polygon has 3 sides. How many angles does it have? how many vertices? which polygon is it? Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. hexagon 4 sides; 4 vertices 3 angles; 3 vertices; triangle U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 13. 13P Name Date Practice Customary Units of Length W h i c h u n i t w o u l d y o u u s e t o m e a s u r e ? W r i t e i n . , f t , y d , o r m i . Accept reasonable answers. ft or in. 1. length of a pen in. 2. width of a desk 3. length of a football field yd 4. distance to Canada ft or in. 6. length of a car 5. height of a boy mi ft or yd F i n d t h e e q u i va l e n t m e a s u r e . 4 7. 48 in. ⴝ ft 8. 6 2 yd ⴝ 10. 18 ft ⴝ 6 yd 11. 144 in. ⴝ 13. 2 mi ⴝ 3520 yd 14. 8 yd ⴝ 16. 5 yd ⴝ 180 in. 17. 5280 yd ⴝ 9. ft 4 yd 288 in. 3 mi 3 mi ⴝ 15,840 ft 60 12. 5 ft ⴝ 15. 10,560 ft ⴝ 18. 6 ft ⴝ 72 in. 2 mi in. C i rc l e t h e l e t t e r o f t h e b e s t e s t i m a t e . 19. length of a sheet of paper a. 11 yd b . 11 ft c . 11 in. 20. height of a doorway a. 2 in. b . 2 yd c . 2 ft 21. width of a room a. 9 ft b . 9 in. c . 9 mi 22. length of a baseball bat a. 3 in. b . 3 ft c . 3 yd 23. width of a calculator a. 3 mi b . 3 in. c . 3 ft C o m p a r e . W r i t e <, =, o r >. 24. 3 ft < 48 in. 25. 1 mi > 1000 yd 26. 72 in. ⴝ 2 yd 27. 15 ft < 7 yd 28. 6000 ft > 1 mi 29. 65 ft < 30 yd 30. 6 yd < 60 ft 31. 5280 yd ⴝ 3 mi 32. 84 in. < 9 ft Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 14. 14P Name Date Practice Customary Units of C a p a c i t y a n d We i g h t W h i c h u n i t w o u l d y o u u s e t o m e a s u r e ? Accept reasonable answers. Write c , p t, q t, or gal. 1. gasoline for a car 3. soup in a can 5. pancake syrup in a plastic bottle gal 2. milk in a container c or pt 4. water in an aquarium 6. juice for lunch pt or qt pt or qt or gal gal c W h i c h u n i t w o u l d y o u u s e t o m e a s u r e ? W r i t e o z o r l b . Accept reasonable answers. 7. lion lb 8. 10. cat lb 11. tea bag 14. bag of potatoes 17. sailboat 20. 3 qt oz 13. bean 16. computer monitor lb oz letter 9. oz lb lb bunch of bananas lb oz 12. flower 15. human being 18. granola bar 21. 3 gal lb oz C o m p a r e . W r i t e <, =, o r >. < 19. 30 c 3 gal > 5 pt < 16 qt 22. 10 qt > 2 gal 23. 32 pt > 15 qt 24. 16 c 25. 1 gal < 9 pt 26. 4 gal < 34 pt 27. 4c 29. 3 lb 45 oz 30. 64 oz 32. 96 oz 6 lb 33. 111 oz < 7 lb c 36. 3 qt ⴝ 6 pt 39. 9 lb ⴝ 144 oz ⴝ 4 qt ⴝ 1 qt C o m p a r e . W r i t e <, ⴝ,, o r >. 28. 6 lb > 31. 11 lb < 60 oz 180 oz > = = 4 lb F i n d t h e e q u i va l e n t m e a s u r e . 34. 24 pt ⴝ 3 gal 35. 8 pt ⴝ 37. 80 oz ⴝ 5 1b 38. 32 oz ⴝ Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 16 2 lb U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 15. 15P Name Date Practice Metric Units of Length W h i ch m e t r i c u n i t o f l e n g t h i s b e s t t o m e a s u r e e a ch ? W r i t e c m , m, o r k m. Accept reasonable answers. 1. width of a book cm 2. height of a tree m 3. length of an eraser cm 4. width of a soccer field m 5. measurement of your waist cm 6. thickness of a door cm 7. bicycle trail km 8. circumference of your wrist cm C i rc l e t h e l e t t e r o f t h e b e s t e s t i m a t e . 9. length of a tissue box a. 25 dm b . 25 cm c . 25 m 10. height of a flagpole a. 6 m b . 6 km c . 6 cm 11. width of a room a. 3 km b . 3 cm c. 3 m 12. length of an audiocassette a. 1 cm b . 1 dm c. 1 m 13. height of a wastebasket a. 45 cm b . 45 dm c . 4.5 m 14. width of a window a. 12 m b . 12 cm c . 12 dm C o m p a r e . W r i t e <, ⴝ,, o r >. 15. 6 km < 6100 m 16. 55 dm ⴝ 550 cm 17. 6.8 m > 670 cm 19. 200 m > 0.02 km 20. 70 cm < 8.8 dm 23. 8000 cm 18. 4000 m > 400 cm 21. 100 km < 100 001 m 22. 2 cm ⴝ 0.02 m > 80 dm PR O B L E M S O LVING 24. 25. Luisa jumped 2 meters in the long jump. Barbie jumped 18 decimeters. Who jumped farther? by how many centimeters? David painted 5 meters of a fence. Tom painted 6 meters of the same fence. Together, did they paint more than 100 decimeters of the fence? Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 2 m ⴝ 20 dm; 20 > 18; Luisa; 20 ⴚ 18 ⴝ 2; 2 dm ⴝ 20 cm; 20 cm 5 ⴙ 6 ⴝ 11; 11 m ⴝ 110 dm; 110 > 100; yes U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 16. 16P Name Date Practice Metric Units of Capacity and Mass W h i ch m e t r i c u n i t i s b e s t t o m e a s u r e t h e c a p a c i t y o f e a ch ? Write m L, o r L . Accept reasonable answers. L 2. cooking pot L 3. car’s gas tank 4. soup bowl mL 5. fish tank L 6. bottle of shampoo mL 7. cup of juice mL 8. drop of rain mL 9. tea kettle mL 1. watering can L W h i ch metric unit is best to measure the mass of each ? Write g, o r k g . bicycle kg 12. Accept reasonable answers. g kitten 14. paper clip g 15. slice of bread g 17. bar of soap g 18. sack of potatoes kg 10. egg g 11. 13. person kg 16. donkey kg Complete each table . 19. 20. L 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 mL 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 g 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 kg 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 PR O B L E M S O LVING 21. 22. Janie has two bottles. One holds 2750 mL of water. The other holds 2500 mL of water. If she fills both bottles, will she have at least 5 L of water? Stan and Laura collect geodes, hollow rocks with crystals inside them. Laura’s largest geode has a mass of 2278 g. Stan’s largest has a mass of 3 kg. Whose geode has the greater mass? Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 2750 ⴙ 2500 ⴝ 5250; 5 L ⴝ 5000 mL; 5250 > 5000; yes 3 kg ⴝ 3000 g; 3000 > 2278; Stan’s geode U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 17. 17P Name Date Practice Make Pictographs C o m p l e t e t h e p i c t o g r a p h fo r t h e s e t o f d a t a u s i n g t h e g i v e n k ey. T h e n a n swer each q u e s t i o n a b o u t t h e g r a p h . 1. Videos at Rent-a-Video Videos at Rent-a-Video Ty p e Number Ty p e Number Adventure 305 Mystery 197 Comedy 445 Science Fiction 240 Drama 353 Documentary 53 2. About how many comedy videos are there? about 450 videos 3. About how many more drama videos than adventure videos are there? 350 300 50; about 50 videos 4. About how many mystery and adventure videos are there altogether? 200 300 500; about 500 videos Adventure ●●● Comedy ●●●●◗ Drama ●●●◗ Mystery ●● Science Fiction ●●◗ Documentary ◗ Key: Each ● 100 videos. Each ◗ 50 videos. M a k e a p i c t o g r a p h f o r t h e d a t a b e l o w . Check students’ graphs. 5. Major League W i n s P i t ch e r Number of Wins Warren Spahn 363 Grover Alexander 373 Walter Johnson 417 Nolan Ryan 324 Early Wynn 300 Cy Young 511 Warren Spahn Key: Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 18. 18P Name Date Practice Make Bar Graphs M a k e a v e r t i c a l b a r g r a p h f o r t h e d a t a l i s t e d b e l o w . Check students’ graphs. 1. Depth of the Great Lakes The Great Lakes Depth in Feet Name Depth in Feet Erie 210 Huron 750 Michigan 923 Ontario 802 Superior 1330 0 Name M a k e a h o r i z o n t a l b a r g r a p h f o r t h e d a t a l i s t e d b e l o w . Check students’ graphs. 2. Width of the Great Lakes The Great Lakes Name Name Width in Miles Erie 57 Huron 183 Michigan 118 Ontario 53 Superior 160 0 Width in Miles Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 19. 19P Name Date Practice C o m p a r e a n d O rd e r W h o l e N u m b e rs C o m p a r e . W r i t e <, ⴝ,, o r >. 1. 4924 > 4912 2. 6082 > 3. 5078 4936 4. 10,035 < 24,686 5. 32,799 ⴝ 32,799 6. 87,909 > 87,800 7. 43,538 < 43,539 < 8. 659,736 < 821,075 9. 507,494 > 506,944 10. 775,387 > 775,359 11. 139,684 > 139,683 12. 256,090 > 256,009 13. 897,146 < 899,146 5931 W r i t e i n o rd e r f ro m l e a s t t o g r e a t e s t . 675; 697; 6759; 6795 14. 6795; 675; 6759; 697 15. 27,918; 9778; 9788; 21,988 16. 92,248; 93,248; 93,148; 94,000 9778; 9788; 21,988; 27,918 92,248; 93,148; 93,248; 94,000 17. 612,038; 621,038; 622,037; 612,037 612,037; 612,038; 621,038; 622,037 18. 459,831; 459,381; 395,491; 459,183 395,491; 459,183; 459,381; 459,831 W r i t e i n o rd e r f ro m g r e a t e s t t o l e a s t . 3720; 3270; 3265; 327 19. 3265; 327; 3270; 3720 20. 11,450; 111,450; 111,540; 1145 111,540; 111,450; 11,450; 1145 21. 509,835; 539,085; 535,895; 593,095 593,095; 539,085; 535,895; 509,835 22. 974,000; 947,000; 964,470; 974,004 974,004; 974,000; 964,470; 947,000 PR O B L E M S O LVING 23. In the late 1970s, the population of Malawi was 5,561,621; the population of Senegal was 5,085,388 and the population of Tunisia was 5,588,209. List the countries in order from least to greatest population. Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. Senegal: 5,085,388; Malawi: 5,561,621; Tunisia: 5,588,209 U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 2. 2P Name Date Practice E q u a l ly / N o t E q u a l ly L i k e ly O u t c o m e s L i s t t h e d i f fe r e n t o u t c o m e s . Then write whether t h e o u t c o m e s a r e e q u a l ly l i k e ly o r n o t e q u a l ly l i k e ly . A, B, C 1. A B C A G H D not equally likely E equally likely F G, H, I, J, K 3. equally likely I K D, E, F 2. J O, L, P, M, N 4. L P O M N N M L Use the spinner at the right to find the p ro b a b i l i t y o f l a n d i n g o n : 5. T Q 3 out of 12 7. S 2 out of 12 8. U 1 out of 12 9. R 4 out of 12 R T S 2 out of 12 6. Q not equally likely S U R T Q R R Q Use the spinner at the right to find the p ro b a b i l i t y o f l a n d i n g o n : Z 10. Y 2 out of 8 11. X 1 out of 8 12. W 1 out of 8 13. Z 4 out of 8 Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. W Y Z Z Z Y X U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 20. 20P Name Date Practice List Outcomes Make a list of all possible outcomes for each experiment. Then write the total number of outcomes. 1. pick a card without looking and roll a number cube GO 4 STOP 16 5 2 3 4 6 1 G-1; G-2; G-3; G-4; G-5; G-6; S-1; S-2; S-3; S-4; S-5: S-6; 12 possible outcomes 2. toss 2 coins C1-H; C2-T; C1-T; C2-H; C1-H; C2-H; C1-T; C2-T; 8 possible outcomes Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 3. spin the spinner and pick a cube without looking 2 1 3 G-1; G-2; G-3; B-1; B-2; B-3; W-1; W-2; W-3; 9 possible outcomes 4. toss a coin and spin the spinner 1 2 3 4 T-1; T-2; T-3; T-4; H-1; H-2; H-3; H-4; 8 possible outcomes Use with student text page 21. 21P Name Date Practice R o u n d W h o l e N u m b e rs Round to the nearest ten. 1. 36 40 2. 324 320 3. 2309 2310 4. 192 190 5. 4419 4420 6. 8008 8010 7. 45 50 8. 728 730 9. 5631 5630 10. 64 60 11. 192 190 12. 3875 3880 Round to the nearest hundred. 13. 934 900 14. 539 500 15. 1084 1100 16. 860 900 17. 3453 3500 18. 7529 7500 19. 8719 8700 20. 4502 4500 21. 6557 6600 22. 16,426 16,400 23. 22,538 22,500 24. 85,297 85,300 25. 43,754 43,800 26. 52,172 52,200 27. 78,358 78,400 7000 30. 37,473 37,000 Round to the nearest thousand. 28. 1369 1000 29. 6550 31. 9089 9000 32. 85,347 85,000 33. 55,500 56,000 34. 5765 6000 35. 78,148 78,000 36. 21,564 22,000 37. 132,948 133,000 38. 983,529 984,000 39. 367,155 367,000 40. 864,443 864,000 41. 596,701 597,000 42. 246,539 247,000 PR O B L E M S O LVING 43. In 1840 Wisconsin had a population of 30,945. Round this number to the nearest hundred. Then round it to the nearest thousand. 30,900; 31,000 44. From 1930 to 1950, Alaska’s population increased by 415,495. Round this number to the nearest hundred. Then round it to the nearest thousand. 415,500; 415,000 Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 3. 3P Name Date Practice A dd a n d S u b t r a c t W h o l e N u m b e rs E s t i m a t e by ro u n d i n g . Then add o r s u b t r a c t . Accept reasonable estimates. 1. 70 ⴙ 53 _____ 2. 57 ⴙ 28 _____ 123 6. 46 ⴚ 13 _____ 85 7. 62 ⴚ 45 _____ 33 11. 269 ⴙ 984 _______ 12. 4213 ⴚ 1764 ________ 816 ⴙ 203 _______ 8. 2449 8356 ⴚ 4523 ________ 3833 4. 26 ⴚ 7 _____ 13. 9. 37 ⴙ 96 _____ 133 10. 82 ⴚ 66 _____ 48 ⴚ 37 _____ 16 460 ⴙ 748 _______ 14. 1208 18. 5. 30 ⴙ 77 _____ 107 19 1019 17. 81 ⴙ 43 _____ 124 17 1253 16. 3. 9631 ⴚ 6109 ________ 11 15. 107 ⴙ 55 _______ 820 ⴙ 974 _______ 1162 19. 3522 1794 20. 7562 ⴚ 2478 ________ 6418 ⴚ 724 ________ 5084 5694 A l i g n a n d a dd o r s u b t r a c t . 21. 9 ⴙ 1030 ⴝ 1039 22. 301 ⴙ 76 ⴝ 23. 478 ⴚ 99 ⴝ 379 24. 4284 ⴚ 415 ⴝ 25. 736 ⴙ 5824 ⴝ 26. 6435 ⴚ 5189 ⴝ 6560 377 3869 1246 PR O B L E M S O LVING 27. In one day a toy company made 947 toy cars and 323 toy trucks. How many toy vehicles did it make? 947 ⴙ 323 ⴝ 1270; 1270 toy vehicles 28. Mr. Rivera sold 1108 newspapers and 157 magazines in one week. How many items did he sell that week? 1108 ⴙ 157 ⴝ 1265; 1265 items 29. Tony weighs 97 pounds. Marie weighs 118 pounds. How much more does Marie weigh than Tony? 30. Hawaii, USA has an area of 6471 square miles. Prince Edward Island, Canada has an area of 2184 square miles. How many square miles smaller is Prince Edward Island than Hawaii? Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 118 ⴚ 97 ⴝ 21; 21 pounds more 6471 ⴚ 2184 ⴝ 4287; 4287 sq mi smaller U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 4. 4P Name Date Practice M u l t i p ly O n e D i g i t E s t i m a t e b y r o u n d i n g . T h e n m u l t i p l y. Accept reasonable estimates. 1. 2. 57 ⴛ 2 _____ 114 6. 7. 86 ⴛ 6 _____ 829 ⴛ 8 _______ 725 ⴛ 6 _______ 37 ⴛ 9 _____ 12. 589 ⴛ 9 _______ 8. 13. 4350 579 ⴛ 3 _______ 9. 94 ⴛ 3 _____ 1737 53 ⴛ 5 _____ 265 10. 70 ⴛ 5 _____ 45 ⴛ 4 _____ 350 910 ⴛ 2 _______ 14. 1820 18. 5. 14 ⴛ 8 _____ 112 282 5301 17. 4. 81 ⴛ 4 _____ 324 333 6632 16. 3. 693 516 11. 77 ⴛ 9 _____ 351 ⴛ 4 _______ 1404 180 15. 695 ⴛ 9 _______ 243 ⴛ 5 _______ 6255 19. 1215 20. 862 ⴛ 7 _______ 373 ⴛ 9 _______ 6034 3357 F i n d t h e p ro d u c t . 21. 3 ⴛ 295 ⴝ 885 22. 9 ⴛ 36 ⴝ 23. 7 ⴛ 979 ⴝ 6853 24. 6 ⴛ 162 ⴝ 972 26. 8 ⴛ 722 ⴝ 5776 25. 4 ⴛ 49 ⴝ 196 324 PR O B L E M S O LVING 27. 28. A car is travelling at an average speed of 55 miles per hour. How far will the car travel in 8 hours? An auditorium can seat 356 people. If all the seats are filled for each performance of a play, how many people can attend 3 performances? Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 8 ⴛ 55 ⴝ 440; 440 miles 3 ⴛ 356 ⴝ 1068; 1068 people U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 5. 5P Name Date Practice One-Digit Quotients D i v i d e a n d ch e ck . 8 R1 ____ ) 1. 2 17 ⴚ __ 16 9 R2 ____ ) 2. 3 29 ⴚ __ 27 7 R2 ____ ) 3. 5 37 ⴚ __ 35 8 R7 ____ ) 4. 8 71 ⴚ __ 64 5. 3 R5 ____ 6)23 ⴚ __ 18 6. 6 R2 ____ 9)56 ⴚ 5 __4 7. 4 R3 ____ 4)19 ⴚ 1 __6 8. 5 R3 ____ 7)38 ⴚ 3 __5 9. 8 R1 ____ 8)65 ⴚ __ 64 10. 7 R2 ____ 6)44 ⴚ 4 __2 11. 5 R3 ____ 5)28 ⴚ 2 __5 12. 7 R3 ____ 7)52 ⴚ 4 __9 15. 29 ⴜ 4 16. 38 ⴜ 6 F i n d t h e q u o t i e n t a n d t h e r e m a i n d e r. 13. 17 ⴜ 3 14. 5 R2 17. 65 ⴜ 9 7 R2 82 ⴜ 9 9 R1 18. 59 ⴜ 8 7 R1 19. 7 R3 33 ⴜ 5 6 R3 6 R2 20. 40 ⴜ 7 5 R5 PR O B L E M S O LVING 21. 22. Ronnie has 49 pencils. If he puts 5 pencils in each packet, how many packets can he fill? How many pencils will be left over? Ling has to stack 76 mugs. Each stack can have no more than 8 mugs. How many stacks of 8 mugs can Ling make? How many mugs will be in the last stack? Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 49 ⴜ 5 ⴝ 9 R4; 9 packets; 4 pencils left over 76 ⴜ 8 ⴝ 9 R4; 9 stacks of 8; 4 mugs left over U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 6. 6P Name Date Practice Tw o - D i g i t Q u o t i e n t s D i v i d e a n d ch e ck . 16 ___ ) 1. 4 64 ⴚ __ 4 ⴚ __ 24 18 ___ ) 2. 5 90 ⴚ 5 ____ ⴚ 4__ 0 26 ___ ) 3. 2 52 ⴚ 4 __ ⴚ 1__ 2 12 ___ ) 4. 6 72 ⴚ 6__ ⴚ 1__ 2 0 0 0 0 12 R2 ___ ) 5. 7 86 ⴚ __ 7 13 R2 ___ ) 6. 3 41 ⴚ __ 3 16 ⴚ __ 14 9. 17 R1 ___ 2)35 ⴚ __ 2 15 ⴚ __ 14 11 R6 ___ ) 7. 8 94 ⴚ 8 __ 11 ⴚ __ 9 10. 19 ___ ) 8. 3 57 ⴚ 3__ 14 ⴚ __ 8 19 R4 ___ 5)99 ⴚ __ 5 11. 49 ⴚ 4__ 5 27 ⴚ 2__ 7 18 R1 ___ 4)73 ⴚ 4 __ 12. 33 ⴚ 3__ 2 15 R2 ___ 6)92 ⴚ 6__ 32 ⴚ 3__ 0 F i n d t h e q u o t i e n t a n d t h e r e m a i n d e r. 13. 73 ⴜ 2 14. 36 R1 16. 87 ⴜ 6 14 R3 95 ⴜ 4 23 R3 17. 39 ⴜ 2 19 R1 15. 59 ⴜ 5 11 R4 18. 83 ⴜ 5 16 R3 PR O B L E M S O LVING 19. Maya and her 3 friends want to share 48 pennies equally. How many pennies should each friend receive? 20. There are 57 cans of tomatoes. How many boxes can be filled if each box holds 4 cans? How many cans will be left over? Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 48 ⴜ 4 ⴝ 12; 12 pennies 57 ⴜ 4 ⴝ 14 R1; 14 boxes; 1 can left over U s e w i t h s t u d e n t t ex t p ag e 7. 7P Name Date Practice Fractions Write the fraction for the shaded part or point on the number line. 1. 2. 3. 2 –– 3 4. 1 –– 2 1 –– 4 ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ 5 –– 6 5. 6. 0 0 5 –– 12 3 –– 7 Draw a model to show each fraction. 7 7. –– as part of a whole 9 8. 4 –– as a point on a number line 5 0 1 Write the fraction in standard form. 7 –– 8 9. seven eighths _____ 10. 2 –– 3 two thirds _____ 12. The numerator is 7. 7 –– 12 The denominator is 12. _____ 11. 2 –– 11 two elevenths _____ 13. The numerator is 2. 2 –– 7 The denominator is 7. _____ Write the word name for each fraction. 14. 3 –– 5 three fifths 15. 9 –– 10 nine tenths 16. 5 –– 6 five sixths 17. 1 –– 4 one fourth 18. 3 –– 8 three eighths 19. 5 –– 12 five twelfths 20. 7 –– 12 seven twelfths 21. 3 –– 20 three twentieths Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. Use with student text page 8. 8P Name Date Practice Equivalent Fractions Use the given chart to find equivalent fractions. 2 1. –– 3 ⴝ 1 4 2. –– 8 ⴝ 6 9 1 2 2 4 1 3 3 6 3. –– 4 ⴝ 8 5 1 4. –– ⴝ 10 2 1 5. –– ⴝ 24 2 3 9 6. –– ⴝ 12 4 1 7. –– ⴝ 26 3 6 8. –– ⴝ 9 2 –– 9. 10 ⴝ 15 1 12. –– 2 ⴝ 1 3 1 4 4 6 3 6 1 4 1 3 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 5 5 5 5 5 1 1 1 1 1 1 6 6 6 6 6 6 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 2 8 10. –– 3 ⴝ 12 2 –– 11. 12 ⴝ 16 1 2 1 4 Use the chart above to compare. Write <, ⴝ, or >. 1 13. –– 3 ⴝ 2 –– 6 1 14. –– 5 > 1 –– 10 2 15. –– 9 3 17. –– 5 > 4 –– 10 2 18. –– 8 < 2 –– 6 8 –– 19. 10 1 21. –– 6 > 1 –– 8 4 22. –– 5 ⴝ 8 –– 10 6 –– 23. 12 3 26. –– 5 < 2 –– 3 1 27. –– 5 8 –– 25. 10 < 8 –– 9 2 –– 3 2 16. –– 3 > 2 –– 3 6 –– 20. 10 < 4 –– 6 1 24. –– 2 > 3 –– 8 3 –– 10 5 28. –– 8 < 5 –– 6 < < < 6 –– 6 3 –– 5 ⴝ Write the missing number to complete the equivalent fraction. 8 –– 29. 10 ⴝ 54 4 –– 30. 12 ⴝ 13 2 31. –– ⴝ 84 4 3 2 33. –– 9 ⴝ 6 8 –– 34. 12 ⴝ 23 9 –– 35. 12 ⴝ 3 37. –– ⴝ 86 4 2 38. –– ⴝ 64 3 2 39. –– ⴝ 41 8 Copyright © William H. Sadlier, Inc. All rights reserved. 5 –– 32. 10 ⴝ 3 4 1 2 3 1 36. –– 6 ⴝ 2 3 6 40. –– 5 ⴝ 10 Use with student text page 9. 9P
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