Problem Solving E PDF or Blackline
- Variety of critical thinking and problem solving skills - typically for fifth and sixth grade
- Each exercise stresses a different age-appropriate thinking skill
- For children in grades 4-8
- Blackline masters for written responses (answer keys included)
- Twenty separate exercises - each with 8 questions
Compilation of fifth and sixth grade concepts requiring critical thinking skills: single and multi-step word problems, conversion and operations with English measurements, perimeter and area of plane figures, prime factors and greatest common factors, percent and decimal and fraction equivalencies, fraction and percent of a set, sales tax and total cost, order of operations, properties, mean and median and range, distance formula, coordinate system and transformations, combinations and probability.
Format: Blackline masters for written responses (answer keys included). Recommended storage (not included): file. PDF can be printed in color.
Blackline masters are good for whole-group instruction, homework, tutoring sessions, and assessments. Because they are used to reproduce worksheets for multiple students, they include copyright for a given site. (However, copyright does not permit sharing among different sites.) Blacklines may be stored in a file or binder and kept in the copy room for teachers to copy for their class as needed. Teachers usually keep a copy of the answer pages in a separate file or binder in the classroom.
Digital PDFs are the same as shipped blackline masters, but emailed as a downloadable digital PDF file to the purchaser's email address. Since no paper or shipping costs are incurred on our part, digital PDFs can be offered for a lower price. Files are downloaded through an immediate separate email from the reputable download service SendOwl. Digital PDFs are copyrighted and allow only limited access. As is the case for shipped blackline masters, masters printed from digital PDFs may be shared among teachers at a single site.
Scope and Sequence Chart (Click here)
The teacher's experience and the sequence of skills in the students' basic math program are the best guides in determining which skills should be introduced first. In general, the scope and sequence chart above can be used as a guide.
A number of sets for younger children are "color coded." Some teachers present all the levels with an exercise set, while others prefer to present all the blue (two-digit) exercises, progress to the pink (three-digit), and culminate with the green (four-digit).
Other skills such as Roman Numerals require no prerequisites other rhan an understanding of place value. Such exercises can be presented any time.
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