Year 6

Entries Tagged as 'Numeracy'

Homework!

April 18th, 2010 · 23 Comments

Here are some maths questions taken from 2003/5 SATs Paper A- remember no calculator allowed. Mr. Hoban.

1.       Each of these bags contains £1.60

          Each bag contains only one type of coin.

  coin.JPG

Complete this table to show how many coins are in each bag.

One has been done for you.

Type of coin Number of coins
1p 160
10p _____
20p _____

1 mark

2.       Martin has some bricks.         

They are 12cm long, 6cm high and 6cm deep.              brick.JPG                        

He builds this tower with five bricks.  

           tower.JPG

How tall is the tower?

 

 

_______________cm

1 mark
Each brick is 12cm long.
tower2.JPG

Martin makes a line of bricks 132cm long.

How many bricks does he use?

 

 

 

_____________________

1 mark
3.   
  lem.JPG 

A bottle holds 1 litre of lemonade.Rachel fills 5 glasses with lemonade.

She puts 150 millilitres in each glass.

How much lemonade is left in the bottle? meth.JPG

2 marks

 4.       Calculate 2307 × 8

1 mark

Tags: Numeracy

Homework.

March 30th, 2010 · No Comments

Well done to all the children who completed their homework and sent it to our website. Keep up your hard work Year 6. Mr. Hoban.

Tags: Numeracy

Homework.

March 27th, 2010 · 13 Comments

Well done to the 17 children who completed homework again this week and sent it to the website. Try this shape problem and post your answers. Good luck! Mr. Hoban.

A white square is painted in one corner of a grey square.

Each side of the white square is half the length of
a side of the grey square.

11

What is the area of the grey section?

 

Tags: Numeracy

Homework!!!

March 24th, 2010 · 17 Comments

2.46

8.61

7.38

11.07

 

1.23

4.92

3.69

9.84

Each line must add up to 18.45. What is the missing number?

Please write your answer in the comment box- I will only publish answers on Friday!

Good Luck! Mr. Hoban.

Tags: Numeracy

Homework.

March 16th, 2010 · 17 Comments

maths.jpg  

Weight kitchen_scales.png

1 kilogram (kg) = 1000 grams (g)

Use the information above to convert the following measurements.

Grams to kilograms

1) 2760g =           kg

2) 7563g=            kg

3) 386g=              kg

4) 37260g=            kg

5) 8467g=              kg

6) 287g=                kg

7) 76543g=            kg

Kilograms to grams

8   2kg =            g      

9) 9kg =            g           

10) 2.8kg =         g       

11) 12kg =          g 

12) 5.4kg =         g 

13) 0.1kg =         g

Good luck!! Mr. Hoban.

Well done to all who completed this homework and sent it to our website. You can see your answers in the comments. Mr. Hoban.

Tags: Numeracy

Revise Time.

January 30th, 2008 · 4 Comments

maths3.jpg

Please click on the following link to revise time. Try the worksheets and see how much you know. Have fun Year 6!! Mr. Hoban.

 http://www.bbc.co.uk/skillswise/numbers/measuring/time/timesanddates/factsheet.shtml

Tags: Numeracy

Well Done.

January 26th, 2008 · No Comments

Thanks to Niamh and Jacob for sending me their homework so quickly- I will publish all homework on Monday. Enjoy the weekend. Mr. Hoban.

Tags: Numeracy

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