This math topic focuses on the skill of "Division by Skip Counting." It involves exercises where students practice dividing numbers by repeating addition (or counting) until they reach a specific total. For example, children calculate how many groups of a certain number (e.g., 7) result in another specific number (e.g., 42, 63). Each problem provides a scenario (like numbers of stars in constellations or pencil crayons in boxes) and requires identifying the number of groups (or units) containing the divisor that total to a given number. This technique helps with understanding division and multiplication relations.

Work on practice problems directly here, or download the printable pdf worksheet to practice offline.

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Division by Skip Counting - Full Skip Count Number Set to Quotient Worksheet

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Division by Skip Counting - Full Skip Count Number Set to Quotient
1
Skip count by 7. How many constellations would have 42 stars total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
8
b
9
c
1
d
4
e
6
2
Skip count by 7. How many constellations would have 63 stars total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
11
b
9
c
12
d
13
e
4
3
Skip count by 7. How many constellations would have 56 stars total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
5
b
8
c
4
d
3
e
12
4
Skip count by 7. How many constellations would have 35 stars total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
2
b
7
c
5
d
8
e
9
5
Skip count by 7. How many constellations would have 49 stars total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
11
b
10
c
7
d
4
e
9
6
Skip count by 7. How many constellations would have 14 stars total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
4
b
6
c
5
d
0
e
2
7
Skip count by 7. How many boxes would have 63 pencil crayons total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
4
b
9
c
11
d
6
e
12
8
Skip count by 7. How many boxes would have 28 pencil crayons total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
7
b
4
c
2
d
0