This math topic focuses on practicing division by skip counting. Specifically, students use skip counting by 3s to solve problems that ask how many items (tricycles or clovers) correspond to a given total of wheels or leaves. The problems provide situations where students must determine how many groups of 3 are contained in a given number, effectively applying skip counting to derive the quotient in a division problem. The exercises are framed as multiple-choice questions, each with five possible answers. This method helps reinforce understanding of division in a practical, real-world context.

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

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

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Division by Skip Counting - Partial Skip Count Number Set to Quotient
1
Skip count by 3. How many tricycles would have 24 wheels total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
3
b
8
c
11
d
10
e
6
2
Skip count by 3. How many clovers would have 12 leaves total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
6
b
2
c
4
d
1
e
7
3
Skip count by 3. How many clovers would have 15 leaves total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
2
b
5
c
7
d
9
e
3
4
Skip count by 3. How many tricycles would have 27 wheels total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
5
b
4
c
7
d
9
e
13
5
Skip count by 3. How many clovers would have 24 leaves total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
10
b
3
c
11
d
8
e
12
6
Skip count by 3. How many tricycles would have 21 wheels total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
7
b
4
c
10
d
2
e
9
7
Skip count by 3. How many clovers would have 21 leaves total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
5
b
7
c
11
d
2
e
10
8
Skip count by 3. How many tricycles would have 18 wheels total?
An svg image showing a math problem
a
2
b
6
c
10
d
1
e
4