Year3 GL Style Maths Activity Revision Booklet Answers
Year3 GL Style Maths Activity Revision Booklet Answers
Year3 GL Style Maths Activity Revision Booklet Answers
83
240
c. 833 = 833
77 86 78 84 74
Largest 86 84 78 77 74 Smallest
426
274
204 + 30
12. Cross out the Dienes that are not needed to represent the number 162.
a. 286 + 4 = 290
b. 256 - 30 = 226
Add and subtract numbers with up to three digits using formal written methods.
2. Calculate the following:
a. b. c. 5 1
6 7 8 6 8 3 3 6 4
+ 3 2 3 − 2 5 1 − 1 2 9
1 0 0 1 4 3 2 2 3 5
1 1 1
Estimate the answer to a calculation and use the inverse operation to check.
3. Use the inverse to check the following calculations. Circle ‘Correct’ or ‘Incorrect’:
4 7 2 + 3 6 4 = 8 3 6
b. There are 460 people on a plane. 125 of the passengers are British, 104 are American
and the rest are French. How many French people are on board the plane?
231
Recall and use multiplication and division facts for the 3, 4 and 8 times tables.
1. Use your knowledge of the 3, 4 and 8 times tables to complete these calculations:
a. 8 × 4 = 32 c. 8 × 6 = 48 e. 48 ÷ 12 = 4
b. 3 × 9 = 27 d. 33 ÷ 11 = 3 f. 40 ÷ 5 = 8
Use known facts to solve multiplication and division problems including two-digit
multiplied by one-digit numbers.
2. Partition these numbers or use a column method to calculate these:
a. 24 × 3 = 72 c. 56 ÷ 4 = 14
b. 18 × 4 = 72 d. 48 ÷ 3 = 16
a. 4 3 × 4 = 1 7 2
1
b. 6 2 × 3 = 1 8 6
a. There are 8 apples in one box. How many apples are there in 6 boxes?
48
b. Kangaroos have 2 legs and zebras have 4 legs. A zoo keeper counts 22
legs altogether. How many kangaroos and zebras could there be?
5 zebras and 1 kangaroo; 4 zebras and 3 kangaroos; 3 zebras and 5 kangaroos; 2 zebras and
7 kangaroos; 1 zebra and 9 kangaroos
c. 18 cupcakes are shared equally between 3 boxes. How many cupcakes are in each box?
6
2 3 4 5 6
10 10 10 10 10
7
2. Shade in the squares to represent the fraction 10 .
½
3 1
4 2
1 6
3 8
1 2
5 10
5 2
10 6
3 2 5
b. + =
8 8
8
3 1 2 1
c. − =
4 4 4 = 2
7 3 4 1
d. − =
8 8 8 = 2
11. Lucy has ¼ of £400. Jack has ¾ of £200. Who has the most money?
Jack has more money because ¾ of £200 = £150 (200 ÷ 4 = 50, 50 × 3 = 150) whereas ¼ of
£400 is £100 (400 ÷ 4 = 100, 100 × 1 = 100).
6cm
3cm
B
3. A block of cheese weighs 250g each. Sam cuts off 120g of cheese. How much is left?
130g
4. Draw a line on jug B so that it shows the same amount of liquid as jug A.
1000ml 500ml
900ml 450ml
800ml 400ml
700ml 350ml
600ml 300ml
500ml 250ml
400ml 200ml
300ml 150ml
200ml 100ml
100ml 50ml
0ml A 0ml B
Perimeter = 28cm
5cm
Perimeter = 16cm
20
p
10
p
80 25
p p
7. Julie buys two rubbers and one pencil. How much change will she get from £1?
50p
8. Zain has a £1 coin. He wants to buy a notebook, a ruler and a pencil. How much more
money will he need?
15p
Tell and write the time on an analogue clock and on 12-hour and 24-hour clocks.
1. Write the digital time underneath each clock:
150mins
4. James ran the 400m race in 1 minute and 40 seconds. Haamaad ran it in 85 seconds. Who
was the fastest? Explain how you know.
Haamaad ran the race the fastest because he ran it in just 85 seconds and James ran it in
1 minute 40 seconds which is 100 seconds.
Draw 2D shapes.
1. Draw a square which has sides of 6cm.
Recognise 3D shapes.
3. Draw lines to match the 3D shapes with their names.
Cuboid
Sphere
Cone
Square-based pyramid
Cylinder
10
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Purple Red Blue Yellow Green
Colours
6 children
5 children
27 children
Solve one and two-step problems using information represented in bar charts,
pictograms and tables.
2. This table show how many packets of crisps were sold in a shop over four weeks.
a. How many packets of chicken crisps did the shop sell in week 2?
12 packets
Ready Salted
c. In week 4, the shop sold half the amount of cheese and onion crisps than salt and
vinegar. Fill in the table with how many packets of cheese and onion it sold that week.
d. How many more packets of crisps were sold altogether in week 2 than in week 3?
9 packets