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Answering questions on a bar chart
This bar chart shows the number of books read in a year by a class of children. Have a look at the chart and then answer the questions.
Answering questions on a line graph
A line graph is used to show a trend over a number of days or hours. It is plotted as a series of points, joined with straight lines. Look at this line graph showi the temperature every day of last week at noon and see if you can answer the questions.
Answering questions on a pie chart
Daniel gets home from school at 4.30pm. He goes to bed at 8.30pm. This pie chart shows the time Daniel spends in the evening (over these four hours) on different activities. See if you can answer these questions about the pie chart.
Calculating the perimeter and area of irregular shapes
A teacher-created KS2 worksheet on calculating the perimeter and area of irregular shapes to support your child's maths learning at home.
Once you know how to find the area of a rectangle, you can use this knowledge to find the area of irregular, compound shapes as long as they are made up of rectangles or squares. Can you calculate the area and perimeter of the shapes below?
Once you know how to find the area of a rectangle, you can use this knowledge to find the area of irregular, compound shapes as long as they are made up of rectangles or squares. Can you calculate the area and perimeter of the shapes below?
Capacity problems revision
Can you answer these tricky capacity problems? You can always fill up a measuring jug with water to help.
Checking subtraction and division with the inverse calculation
For these subtraction questions, use addition to check if the answers are right or wrong. For these division questions, use multiplication to check if the answers are right or wrong.
Constructing a bar chart
Make a list of first names of 20 people you know. Write their full first names, not their nicknames. Can you divide these names into groups according to the number of letters in each name? Complete a
tally chart to help you. Now use this information to construct a bar chart.
tally chart to help you. Now use this information to construct a bar chart.
Constructing a line graph
Starting on a Monday, take a record of the number of minutes of television you have watched every day. Record your information in this blank table. Now see if you can use this information to construct a line graph.
Dividing three-digit numbers
To work out these division questions you could use the chunking method you learnt in Y5 (see Year 5 worksheets) or this quicker method. See is you can use this method to answer these tricky division questions.
Giving a decimal answer to a division question
If the result of a division calculation is a whole number with a remainder you could show it as a decimal number instead. Use these method to solve these really tricky division questions.