Summer 5 Math PDF
Summer 5 Math PDF
Summer 5 Math PDF
Have your child complete one page (one side), three times a week of the math packet. Please
return this completed packet in September to your fifth grade teacher. The grade receiving the
largest percentage of summer packets returned will win an extra recess at school. Your
child will receive a prize and certificate for completing the packet. The biggest prize of all is
being ready for fifth grade!
After your child has completed the math problems and you feel your child is still struggling on a
certain concept and needs further practice, you can visit some of the web sites listed on the next
page. You can also make up problems of your own for additional practice.
If you need another copy of the math packet you can go on Oakbrook’s website at
http://www.macomb.k12.mi.us/utica/oakbrook/oakbrook.htm and print another copy.
Also included is an answer key on different color paper for parents use only in assisting your
child.
FOURTH GRADE
When entering fifth grade this is what is expected that your child should already know.
www.wildmath.com Select “Play the game”. Select addition, subtraction or multiplication and grade.
You can race to beat your time.
www.harcourtschool.com Click the red box, select math, select HSPMath, select Michigan, click on the
“4” ball or “5” ball for a challenge. Select a game.
www.aplusmath.com Go under “Flashcards” or “Game Room” on the left side of the screen.
They can practice adding, subtracting and multiplying. Very important to
know the addition, subtraction and multiplication facts from memorization
or within a couple seconds.
www.mathisfun.com Select numbers then Math Trainer for adding, subtracting and multiplication.
Or at the home screen select games and pick a game to play.
www.eduplace.com Select your state – “Michigan” press submit. Select the student tab
then click on the “mathematics” rectangle. Click in the center book
“Houghton Mifflin Math 2007”, Click on “Grade 4”. Select any games.
Extra Help and Extra Practice is good, also eGames.
www.aaamath.com At the top pick “Fourth” or “Fifth” for a challenge. Choose any of the
activities like multiplication then select “play” option toward the top
of the screen. 20 Questions and Countdown games are good ones.
• Take a deck of cards and remove the face cards (kings, queens, jacks). Aces are one. Divide the
cards evenly among 2 players. Each player flips over a card. The first one to add the 2 numbers
correctly the fastest wins the cards. After going through the pile of cards, the player with the
most cards wins. You can do a multiplication version also.
4
TERMS
Edges: This is all the straight lines of a figure. Like the edge of a desk.
Faces: This is the flat surface of a figure.
Vertex: This is all the corners of a figure.
Perimeter: You add up all the sides. (You are adding all lengths of the outer edges together.)
Area: *Area of a square or rectangle = length(l) x width(w) answer is written in “square inches”
(or whatever the measurement is).
*Area of a parallelogram is length x height.
Answer written in “square inches” (or whatever measurement)
|
| height
Length
*Area of a triangle is ½ base x height. Answer written in “square inched”
(or whatever measurement).
Mean: This is average. You add the set of number values and divide it by how many
numbers you have.
Median: Arrange numbers from smallest to largest. What number is in the middle?
That is the Median number.
Mode: What number occurs most often? This number is the mode.
Range: Subtract the largest number in the group from the smallest number in the group.
This number is the range.
Equilateral triangle is where all 3 sides of the triangle measure the same length.
Isosceles triangle is where only 2 of the sides of a triangle are equal in length.
Conversion:
60 seconds = 1 minute 24 hours = 1 day 52 weeks = 1 year
60 minutes = 1 hour 7 days = 1 week 12 months = 1 year
Select the one best answer for each question. DO NOT use a calculator in completing this packet.
1. Which of the following sets of numbers are all of the factors of 24?
A. 1, 3, 8, 24
B. 2, 4, 6, 8, 12, 24
C. 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12
D. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 24
A. 18
B. 28
C. 44
D. 56
3. The following are all multiples of a one-digit number: 12, 24, 30, 42.
A. 5
B. 6
C. 7
D. 8
A. 83
B. 84
C. 85
D. 86
A. 35, 47, 52
B. 35, 36, 37
C. 35, 42, 49
D. 37, 47, 57
6
6. Al sees this sign at a copy center. What is the least number of copies Al can make without losing
any money?
A. 5
B. 30
C. 75
D. 150
A. 2
B. 4
C. 12
D. 15
10. Since 4 x 10 = 40, and 40 x 5 = 200, then which of the following is true?
A. 14 x 45 = 200
B. 4 x 10 x 5 = 200
C. 4 x 10 x 40 = 200
D. 40 x 10 x 5 = 200
11. My number is a multiple of 5. It is less than 100 and has a factor of 6. What is my number?
A. 25 C. 60
B. 36 D. 66
7
12. Write the products: Practice any you do not know quickly.
4 8 11 2 2 7 10 12 6 5 9 5 0
x2 x4 x2 x5 x3 x5 x3 x4 x3 x4 x4 x3 x2
3 9 2 5 7 10 6 5 11 1 4 8 11
x3 x5 x7 x5 x4 x4 x4 x2 x5 x3 x5 x2 x4
6 8 6 3 9 10 12 3 7 4 9 4 12
x5 x4 x2 x4 x3 x2 x3 x5 x3 x4 x2 x3 x2
9 7 5 2 6 7 3 4 5 8 3 11 5
x8 x6 x10 x7 x9 x7 x8 x6 x9 x7 x9 x7 x7
9 2 6 4 5 6 4 8 10 3 7 4 7
x6 x9 x7 x11 x6 x8 x9 x8 x8 x6 x8 x7 x9
2 3 9 8 2 3 9 7 0 2 5 4 6
x6 x12 x9 x6 x8 x6 x7 x8 x9 x12 x8 x9 x6
13. Since 5 x 20 = 100, which number will complete the number sentence below to make it true?
5 x _____ x 5 = 100
A. 4
B. 5
C. 20
D. 25
A. 61
B. 69
C. 71
D. 79
8
A. 158
B. 242
C. 162
D. 262
A. 3 x (4 + 9)
B. 3 + (40 x 9)
C. 3 x (40 + 9)
D. (3 x 4) + (3 x 9)
A. (50 x 4) + (7 x 4)
B. (50 + 5) + 2
C. (50 x 5) + 2
D. (50 x 4) + 7
A. 80 x (3 + 5)
B. (80 x 5) + (3 x 5)
C. (5 x 80) + 3
D. (80 x 5) + ((80 x 3)
A. 4,812 r0
B. 495 r1
C. 280 r10
D. 496 r0
A. 25,200
B. 2,520
C. 253
D. 252
9
A. 15
B. 100
C. 105
D. 150
23. There are 168 lunches to be shared equally among 3 fourth-grade classes. How many lunches will
go to each class?
A. 56
B. 165
C. 171
D. 504
A. 370
B. 375
C. 3740
D. 37500
A. 4,836 ÷ 6 = 86
B. 4,836 ÷ 6 = 806
C. 3,215 ÷ 5 = 641
D. 3,215 ÷ 5 = 603
A. 200
B. 30
C. 20
D. 2
27. Fill in the blank with the number that makes this math sentence correct:
12 x _____ = 60
A. 7
B. 4
C. 6
D. 5
10
A. 4
B. 5
C. 80
D. 120
A. 3
B. 28
C. 141
D. 147
A. 4
B. 24
C. 40
D. 256
A. 7
B. 8
C. 9
D. 10
A. 18 x 3 = _____
B. 18 + 3 = _____
C. 18 ÷ 3 = _____
D. 18 – 3 = _____
33. The students in your class collected pop cans to raise money for a class trip. The goal for each
student was to collect 150 cans each. There are 27 students in your class. How many cans would
that be altogether?
A. 177 cans
B. 405 cans
C. 1350 cans
D. 4050 cans
11
34. Suppose 33 photos are placed in a photo album. How many pages are needed if 3 photos fit
on a page? Show your work.
A. 9 pages
B. 10 pages
C. 11 pages
D. 12 pages
36. Mr. Clark was given some change at the grocery store. He was given 5 one dollar bills, 6 quarters,
2 dimes and a penny. How much change did he get?
A. $5.62
B. $6.71
C. $56.21
D. $6.21
37. What decimal part of one dollar is the sum of these coins?
A. 2.00
B. 0.20
C. 0.02
D. 0.22
A.
B.
C.
D.
12
A. 0.4
B. 0.04
C. 0.25
D. 0.75
41. Which point on the number line below best represents 1.75?
A. Point A
B. Point B
C. Point C
D. Point D
45. Write the following fractions in decimal form. Remember: . tenths hundredths
A. One half
B. 5/1
C. Five hundredths
D. 5/1000
A. A
B. B
C. C
D. D
14
50. There are 4 red cars, 5 blue cars, and 2 green cars in the parking lot. What is the fraction of Blue cars
in the parking lot?
A.
B.
C.
D.
51. What is the fraction for the shaded part of this set?
A. 3/8
B. 3/4
C. 3/7
52. Look at this set of objects. Which fraction stands for the part of the set that is shaded?
A. 3/5
B. 5/3
C. 5/8
D. 3/8
15
54. Which of the following best represents the location of the X on the number line below?
X
0 1 2 3
A. 1¼
B. 1½
C. 1¾
D. 2¼
A. 10/12
B. 11/12
C. 6/12
D. 5/12
56. How many eighths equal ¼?
A. 1/8
B. 2/8
C. 4/8
D. 7/8
A. 11 ½
B. 2/11
C. 4½
D. 5½
59. Which of the following is listed from smallest to largest? Draw pictures
A.
B.
C.
D.
A. 21
B. 33
C. 49
D. 53
A.
B.
C.
D.
17
63. The distance from home to school is 7/8 of a mile for Amy and 4/8 of a mile from Tom.
How much farther does Amy walk than Tom?
A. 11/8
B. 11/16
C. 3/16
D. 3/8
64. Sonya needs ½ teaspoon of salt for her recipe to make rolls. She needs ¼ teaspoon of salt for
her recipe to make biscuits. How much salt will she need to make both recipes?
A. 2/6 tsp.
B. 3/4 tsp.
C. 1/8 tsp.
D. 1/6 tsp.
65. Solve for the unknown in this equation: 2/4 + n = 3/4 n = _______
A. 5/4
B. 1/2
C. 1/4
D. 5/8
A. .27
B. .35
C. .5
D. 1.7
67. How much is 1.14 ÷ 2? Do not use a calculator. (Line up and move decimal straight up into answer)
A. .7
B. .52
C. .57
D. 1.7
68. Which of the following is closest to the sum of 811 and 356? No calculator☺.
A. 1400
B. 1300
C. 1200
D. 1100
69. Which of the following is closest to the product of 81 and 82? Do not use a calculator.
A. 6400
B. 7200
C. 720
D. 64,000
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70. One hundred fourth graders at Beacon Tree Elementary are attending a field day. The teachers need
to know how many hot dogs to buy. All the following are reasonable approximations EXCEPT.
71. A cat sleeps an average of 17 hours each day. About how many hours does a cat sleep in a month?
A. 300 hours
B. 600 hours
C. 170 hours
D. 6000 hours
72. Find the difference: Remember “bottom bigger better borrow” and you can only borrow from next
door. You can always check your answers by adding your answer and the second number and this
should equal your top number.
36 47 59 28 19 56 78
x 47 x 68 x 39 x 18 x 47 x 36 x 37
A. 9 cm
B. 10 cm
C. 11 cm
D. 12 cm
19
75. What is the length of this light bulb to the nearest inch?
A. 2 in.
B. 3 in.
C. 4 in.
D. 5 in.
76. What is the best estimate of the area, in square centimeters, of the SHADED FIGURE on the grid
below? One square equals one square centimeter.
A. 5 square centimeters
B. 11 square centimeters
C. 13 square centimeters
D. 15 square centimeters
77. Which is most likely the length of a telephone book?
A. 30 kilometers
B. 30 centimeters
C. 30 millimeters
D. 30 meters
78. Brent is making a sail for a toy boat. The sail needs to be 3.55 cm wide. Which measure would be
MOST useful in making the sail?
A. 50 degrees C
B. 55 degrees C
C. 57 degrees C
D. 60 degrees C
80. Bobbie was writing an article for the school newspaper about the amount of homework the 4th
grade teachers were assigning. He was surprised to find out that the average student only spent
20 minutes per night doing homework. To make it sound longer, he decided to convert the time
from minutes to seconds in the article. How many seconds did the average student spend on
homework?
A. 80 seconds
B. 120 seconds
C. 800 seconds
D. 1,200 seconds
81. Sheryl planned to buy a wall paper border for her bedroom. She measured the lengths of the
walls and found the perimeter of her room. Use the picture below to determine the perimeter.
A. 22 ft.
B. 34 ft.
C. 44 ft.
D. 120 ft.
21
82. Sheryl may want to buy new carpeting for her room. She needs the square footage of the room
to take to the store to price how much carpeting would be. What is the area of her room in the
picture above?
A. 22 square feet
B. 120 square feet
C. 100 square feet
D. 144 square feet
83. Using the formula for finding the area, what is the area of the figure below?
A. 18 sq. cm.
B. 22 sq. cm.
C. 32 sq. cm.
D. 54 sq. cm.
6 feet
4 feet
4 feet
2 ft.
2 feet
A. 12 feet
B. 18 feet
C. 24 feet
D. 36 feet
22
A. 12 square feet
B. 28 square feet
C. 24 square feet
D. 36 square feet
86. Sharon had a rectangular garden with a perimeter of 36 feet. The fence surrounding it was falling
down on one of the short sides (width). If the length of the garden was 10 feet, how many feet of
fence did she need to replace the broken portion (width) of the fence?
Length = 10 ft.
A. 6 feet
B. 8 feet
C. 10 feet
D. 26 feet
87. What is the area of the rectangle garden on the previous page (#86)?
A. 6 square feet
B. 18 square feet
C. 80 square feet
D. 100 square feet
88. If the perimeter of a square is 48 cm, what is the length of each side? (Draw a picture and think of
the key word of what type of shape it is.)
A. 8 cm
B. 10 cm
C. 12 cm
D. 24 cm
89. What is the width of a rectangle that has a length of 6 feet and an area of 60 square feet?
Draw a picture.
A. 10 feet
B. 12 feet
C. 24 feet
D. 66 feet
23
90. What is the width of a rectangle with a length of 5 inches and a perimeter of 16 inches?
Draw a picture.
A. 2 inches
B. 3 inches
C. 8 inches
D. 21 inches
91. Sarah opens her book. What is the angle formed by the open book?
A. acute
B. equal to a right angle
C. obtuse
D. cannot tell without a picture of a right angle
A. parallel
B. perpendicular
C. not intersecting
A. parallel
B. perpendicular
C. intersecting
A. none of them
B. B
C. C
D. D
A. none of them
B. B
C. C
D. D
25
99. Which type of triangle has only 2 equal sides, like the drawing below?
A. equilateral triangle
B. isosceles triangle
C. pyramid
D. right triangle
A. equilateral triangle
B. isosceles triangle
C. pyramid
D. right triangle
A. 3 vertices
B. 8 vertices
C. 10 vertices
D. 18 vertices
A. 6 faces
B. 8 faces
C. 10 faces
D. 18 faces
A. 3 edges
B. 9 edges
C. 12 edges
D. 18 edges
26
A. 2 faces
B. 3 faces
C. 4 faces
D. 5 faces
A. 2 faces
B. 3 faces
C. 4 faces
D. 5 faces
A. 3 edges
B. 4 edges
C. 5 edges
D. 8 edges
103. Which of these shapes can be folded in half so that both halves are the same (line symmetry)?
Show this by drawing the line of symmetry on the figure, then choose the correct answer.
A. Tessellation
B. Copy
C. Flip
D. Slide
27
105. Sharon had a bag of 12 marbles. She gave 8 of the marbles to Don. Which fractional part of the
marbles did Sharon have left?
A. 8/12
B. 4/8
C. 4/12
D. ¼
106. Laura wrote 200 words on the first page of her journal. After the second page, she had 400 words.
If the pattern continues, how many pages will it take her to write 1000 words? Continue to fill in
the table to find the answer.
A. 3
B. 4
C. 5
D. 6
107. Answer the following questions using this set of data. { 2, 2, 3, 5, 10, 10, 10}
108. What is the length of a rectangle with a width of 4 centimeters and a perimeter of 28 centimeters?
A. 7 centimeters
B. 10 centimeters
C. 20 centimeters
D. 24 centimeters
8 11 18 11 20 9
A. 3, 4, 6, 8, 3, 4
B. 2, 4, 5, 6, 4
C. 1, 5, 6, 10, 4
D. 7, 8, 3, 6, 1
A.
B.
C.
A.
B.
C.
29
______________fraction
______________decimal
114. The chart below shows the number of minutes that Katie spent on her computer each day for
one week.
Katie’s Computer Time
Sunday 59
Monday 65
Tuesday 42
Wednesday 84
Thursday 64
Friday 37
Saturday 46
A. 47
B. 53
C. 59
D. 37
A. 4
B. 7
C. 8
D. 13
30
A. 4
B. 8
C. 9
D. 13
117. Find the median of: 9, 4, 3, 7, 2, 8, 4
A. 4
B. 5
C. 6
D. 7
2, 1, 7, 3, 5, 2, 9, 7, 10, 4, 2, 10
A. 2
B. 8
C. 9
D. 10
A. ¼, 1/3, ½
B. ½, 1/3, ¼
C. 1/3, ¼, ½
31
121. During July, the third and fourth graders kept track of the number of minutes they read each week.
Use this graph to figure out how many minutes total the third graders read in July.
A. 250
B. 400
C. 1000
D. 2700
122. How many more total seeds did Liz spit across the line than Donald, in all 4 rounds?
A. 1
B. 4
C. 5
D. 7
32
123. How many more girls were born in June through August then boys?
A. 5
A. 5
B. 6
C. 7
D. They are the same
A. 5
B. 10
C. 15
D. 20
33
125. Do the following divisions. Then check your answer. Show your work. No calculators!
A. 1524 ÷ 6 =________
x 6
1524
B. 380 ÷ 10 = _________
x 10
380
C. 4235 ÷ 10 = _________
x____________
_____
D. 4) 769
x_____________
_____
E. 5) 765
x_____________
127. Place these two fractions on the two number lines below to show why they are equivalent.
128. Show how these two fractions are equal by shading some of each rectangle.
1/3 2/6
You may use fraction bars or number lines to illustrate your explanation.
35
130. Locate these two fractions on the number line, label each, and then explain which is larger.
__________ is larger.
131. Locate and label these two fractions on the number line. Then tell which is larger.
___________ is larger
132. On the strips below, shade and label the following fractions.
133. Locate and label this fraction on the number line. Then write it as a mixed number:
134. Write this fraction as a mixed number. Then create a picture that represents it as a mixed number:
135. Identify the shaded portion of this picture as a mixed number and an improper fraction.
139. Using a ruler and a tool or object with a 90 degree corner, draw and label all of the following:
6 4 7 5 12 3 6 3 0 7 5 6 3 8
x2 x4 x2 x4 x0 x5 x3 x8 x8 x3 x5 x4 x9 x3
6 2 3 8 7 12 8 3 11 7 9 4 4 9
x5 x12 x6 x2 x5 x1 x4 x7 x4 x6 x2 x8 x6 x3
4 5 0 5 9 5 2 9 5 11 5 9 7 7
x7 x0 x3 x8 x4 x7 x1 x5 x6 x5 x9 x8 x7 x9
8 6 8 1 9 9 8 1 9 2 1 3 12 1
x8 x6 x7 x2 x6 x9 x6 x9 x1 x5 x1 x4 x3 x3
8 8 12 8 12 5 3 4 2 7 6 2 6 12
x0 x1 x4 x9 x0 x1 x2 x0 x2 x1 x8 x6 x7 x5
8 4 2 9 12 11 2 7 0 6 1 5 3 2
x5 x1 x8 x7 x8 x6 x9 x4 x2 x9 x0 x2 x3 x4
4 12 4 4 1 2 11 6 7 5 2 1 4 11
X9 x6 x2 x3 x4 x3 x7 x1 x8 x3 x7 x8 x5 x4
39
__ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
2)2 3)9 8)32 7)49 5)10 4)0 1)1 4)8 2)12 9)54 1)3 1)2 2)4
__ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
8)8 7)63 8)40 5)0 4)4 4)12 9)45 9)63 6)6 3)12 1)7 3)0 1)9
__ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
2)16 3)3 3)15 5)20 3)18 3)6 5)15 7)0 9)27 4)16 7)21 4)20 7)28
__ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
8)16 3)21 9)18 4)24 2)6 1)8 5)35 7)35 3)27 6)36 3)24 2)0 4)32
__ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
9)9 4)36 6)42 5)40 8)64 7)14 6)30 8)56 1)5 4)28 7)56 8)24 6)24