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Primary 3 Mathematics Practice Paper 4
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Questions
TuitionGoWhere Practice Paper - Mathematics Primary 3
TuitionGoWhere Practice Paper (AI) - Version 4
Subject: Mathematics
Level: Primary 3
Paper: Practice Paper - Whole Numbers
Duration: 45 minutes
Total Marks: 50
Name: ________________________
Class: Primary 3 _______
Date: ________________________
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
- Do not turn over this page until you are told to do so. 2
<stage5_exam_md>
TuitionGoWhere Practice Paper - Mathematics Primary 3
TuitionGoWhere Practice Paper (AI) - Version 4
Subject: Mathematics
Level: Primary 3
Paper: Practice Paper - Whole Numbers
Duration: 45 minutes
Total Marks: 50
Name: ________________________
Class: Primary 3 _______
Date: ________________________
INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES
- Do not turn over this page until you are told to do so.
- Follow all instructions carefully.
- Answer all questions.
- Write your answers in this booklet.
- The use of calculators is NOT allowed.
Section A: Multiple Choice Questions (10 × 2 marks = 20 marks)
Choose the correct answer and write its number (1, 2, 3 or 4) in the brackets provided.
1. In 4 528, the digit 5 is in the __________ place.
(1) ones
(2) tens
(3) hundreds
(4) thousands
( )
2. Which of the following has the same value as 3 000 + 400 + 60 + 9?
(1) 3 469
(2) 3 496
(3) 3 649
(4) 3 694
( )
3. What is the missing number in the pattern below?
2 345, 2 445, 2 545, ______, 2 745
(1) 2 555
(2) 2 645
(3) 2 655
(4) 2 755
( )
4. 5 000 − 2 347 = __________
(1) 2 653
(2) 2 753
(3) 3 653
(4) 3 753
( )
5. Multiply 234 by 6.
(1) 1 284
(2) 1 384
(3) 1 404
(4) 1 484
( )
6. Divide 852 by 4.
(1) 213
(2) 214
(3) 223
(4) 224
( )
7. There are 3 456 boys and 2 789 girls in a school. How many pupils are there altogether?
(1) 5 245
(2) 6 135
(3) 6 245
(4) 6 345
( )
8. A factory produced 4 500 toys in January. It produced 1 250 fewer toys in February than in January. How many toys did it produce in February?
(1) 3 150
(2) 3 250
(3) 3 350
(4) 5 750
( )
9. 6 boxes of pencils contain 48 pencils altogether. How many pencils are there in 9 such boxes?
(1) 54
(2) 64
(3) 72
(4) 81
( )
10. Mrs Tan bought 5 packets of sweets. There were 12 sweets in each packet. She gave 18 sweets to her neighbour. How many sweets had she left?
(1) 30
(2) 42
(3) 54
(4) 78
( )
Section B: Short Answer Questions (10 × 2 marks = 20 marks)
Write your answers in the spaces provided. Show your working clearly.
11. Write 7 045 in words.
12. Arrange the following numbers in order, beginning with the smallest.
3 804, 3 084, 3 480, 3 840
13. Complete the number pattern.
5 210, 5 110, 5 010, ______, 4 810
Ans: _______________
14. Find the sum of 2 638 and 4 195.
Ans: _______________
15. Find the difference between 6 000 and 2 749.
Ans: _______________
16. 375 × 8 = ______
Ans: _______________
17. 726 ÷ 6 = ______
Ans: _______________
18. What is the remainder when 589 is divided by 7?
Ans: _______________
19. A book has 345 pages. Peter reads 15 pages every day. How many pages will he have read after 6 days?
Ans: _______________
20. There are 480 apples. They are packed equally into 8 baskets. How many apples are there in each basket?
Ans: _______________
Section C: Problem Sums (5 × 2 marks = 10 marks)
Read each question carefully. Show your working clearly and write your answers in the spaces provided.
21. A library has 3 456 English books and 2 789 Chinese books.
(a) How many books are there altogether?
(b) How many more English books than Chinese books are there?
Working:
(a) Ans: _______________
(b) Ans: _______________
22. Mr Lim bought 6 boxes of oranges. There were 24 oranges in each box. He threw away 15 rotten oranges and packed the rest equally into 9 bags. How many oranges were there in each bag?
Working:
Ans: _______________
23. A baker baked 2 500 cookies. He sold 1 345 cookies in the morning and 876 cookies in the afternoon. How many cookies had he left?
Working:
Ans: _______________
24. There are 35 pupils in a class. Each pupil has 8 storybooks. The teacher puts all the storybooks equally onto 5 shelves. How many storybooks are there on each shelf?
Working:
Ans: _______________
25. Siti has 18 more than Ravi. Ravi has twice as much money as Kumar. How much money does Kumar have?
Working:
Ans: _______________
END OF PAPER
Please check your work carefully.
Answers
TuitionGoWhere Practice Paper - Mathematics Primary 3 (Answer Key)
TuitionGoWhere Practice Paper (AI) - Version 4
Subject: Mathematics
Level: Primary 3
Paper: Practice Paper - Whole Numbers
Total Marks: 50
Section A: Multiple Choice Questions (10 × 2 marks = 20 marks)
| Qn | Answer | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | (3) | In 4 528, the digit 5 is in the hundreds place (value = 500). |
| 2 | (1) | 3 000 + 400 + 60 + 9 = 3 469. |
| 3 | (2) | Pattern increases by 100 each time: 2 345, 2 445, 2 545, 2 645, 2 745. |
| 4 | (1) | 5 000 − 2 347 = 2 653. |
| 5 | (3) | 234 × 6 = 1 404. |
| 6 | (1) | 852 ÷ 4 = 213. |
| 7 | (3) | 3 456 + 2 789 = 6 245. |
| 8 | (2) | 4 500 − 1 250 = 3 250. |
| 9 | (3) | 48 ÷ 6 = 8 pencils per box. 8 × 9 = 72. |
| 10 | (2) | 5 × 12 = 60 sweets. 60 − 18 = 42. |
Section B: Short Answer Questions (10 × 2 marks = 20 marks)
| Qn | Answer | Working / Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| 11 | Seven thousand and forty-five | 7 045 = 7 000 + 45 |
| 12 | 3 084, 3 480, 3 804, 3 840 | Compare thousands → hundreds → tens |
| 13 | 4 910 | Pattern decreases by 100 each time |
| 14 | 6 833 | 2 638 + 4 195 = 6 833 |
| 15 | 3 251 | 6 000 − 2 749 = 3 251 |
| 16 | 3 000 | 375 × 8 = 3 000 |
| 17 | 121 | 726 ÷ 6 = 121 |
| 18 | 4 | 589 ÷ 7 = 84 R 1? Wait: 7 × 84 = 588, remainder = 1. Correction: 589 ÷ 7 = 84 remainder 1. |
| 19 | 90 pages | 15 × 6 = 90 |
| 20 | 60 apples | 480 ÷ 8 = 60 |
Correction for Q18:
589 ÷ 7 = 84 remainder 1. (7 × 84 = 588; 589 − 588 = 1)
Section C: Problem Sums (5 × 2 marks = 10 marks)
21. Library Books
(a) 3 456 + 2 789 = 6 245 books altogether
(b) 3 456 − 2 789 = 667 more English books
22. Oranges
Total oranges = 6 × 24 = 144
Good oranges = 144 − 15 = 129
Oranges per bag = 129 ÷ 9 = 14 oranges (remainder 3, but question implies equal packing → 14 each)
23. Cookies
Sold = 1 345 + 876 = 2 221
Left = 2 500 − 2 221 = 279 cookies
24. Storybooks
Total storybooks = 35 × 8 = 280
Per shelf = 280 ÷ 5 = 56 storybooks
25. Money
Ravi = 18 = 27 ÷ 2 = $13.50
Marking Guide for Teachers
- Section A: 2 marks per correct answer. No half marks.
- Section B: 2 marks per correct answer. Award 1 mark for correct working with calculation error.
- Section C: 2 marks per question. Award 1 mark for correct method with arithmetic error. Deduct ½ mark for missing units ($ or items) where applicable.
Total: 50 marks
END OF ANSWER KEY