|
Sample math WASL questions |
||||
|
WASL Links by grade
Kindergarten
Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 (strategy description) Grade 4 (strategy description) Grade 5 (strategy description) Grade 6 (strategy description) Grade 7 (strategy description) Grade 8 (strategy description) High School (strategy description) |
Math
Practice Problems for Third Grade in Algebraic Sense 3A-26)
Answer: 27 What
2-digit number is three times the sum of its digits? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-25)
Answer: $819.15 Dylan's
mother offered to pay him to carry 14 bags of leaves to the compost pile. Dylan
said he would do it if she would pay him 5 cents for the first bag, 10 cents for
the second, and so on, doubling the amount with each bag. His mother only smiled
and shook her head. How much would she have to pay? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-24) Answer:
25 meteors Some
scientists believe they saw 52 meteors and others believe they saw 27. How many
more did one group supposedly see than the other? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-23) Answer:
the 5th night A
crew of spiders moved into the scary old house and started working at once. They
spun 2 webs on the first night, and 7 webs on the second night. On the third
night they wove 12 webs. Every night they made 5 more webs than they had made
the night before. If the spiders kept spinning in this way, on what night did
they spin their 60th web? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-22)
Answer: Al-30 chips; John-14 chips Al
already has 16 more chips than John has. Al and John are playing a game with
their friends. John and Al have won 44 chips altogether. How many chips has each
boy won? Write to
help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-21)
Answer: 5 Lyn
and her friends made a pile of 31 snowballs this morning. Then the sun came out.
It melted 1 snowball in the first hour, 2 snowballs in the second hour; and 4
snowballs in the third hour. Each hour the sun is melting twice as many
snowballs as it did the hour before. If the sun keeps melting snowballs in this
way, how many hours in all will it take the sun to melt the whole pile of
snowballs? Write to
help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-20)
Answer: 4 fleas, 3 ticks Bowser,
poor dog, has lost his collar; so he has a few uninvited fleas and ticks in his
house. Each flea has 6 legs, and each tick has 8 legs. Not counting Bowser's
legs, there are 48 legs in Bowser's house. There are the same number of flea
legs as tick legs. How many fleas and how many ticks are there in Bowser's
house? Write to
help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-19)
Answer: 63 Papa's
Pizza Place just opened for business. The good smells bring people into Papa's
for pizza. Papa's sold 9 pizzas on the first day, 15 pizzas on the second day,
and 21 pizzas on the third day. On the fourth day, Papa's sold 27 pizzas. Papa's
business kept growing in the same way for a long time. How many pizzas did
Papa's Pizza Place sell on the tenth day? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-18) Answer:
40 Something
terrible is happening in the third grade at Summers-coming School. A few
students got the wigglegigs on Monday, and it seems to be spreading. On Tuesday,
2 more students caught the wigglegigs than on Monday. Each day after that, 2
more students caught the wigglegigs than the day before. On Friday, 12 students
caught the wigglegigs. How many students caught the wigglegigs in five days? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-17) Answer:
the 6th week MarIon
was saving his money to buy a drum. He was earning money by pulling weeds in his
neighbor's garden. He earned $0.50 the first week, and $1.00 the next week. The
next week he earned $1.50, and he put it with the rest of his money. Each week
he earned $0.50 more than he had earned the week before. If Marion kept earning
money this way, in what week would he have a total of $10.50? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-16)
Answer: 24 Sarah
and Kay are both collecting baseball cards. On Monday each of them got 3 cards.
The next day Sarah got 5 and Kay got 4. On Wednesday Sarah got 7 and Kay got 6.
On Thursday each girl got 9. If Sarah and Kay keep getting cards in the same
way, how many cards will Kay get on the day that Sarah gets 15? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-15) Answer:
22 When
the leaves turned color, Hal and Dan began to sell pumpkins. On the first day,
Hal and Dan each sold one pumpkin. The next day Hal sold 2 pumpkins and Dan sold
4. On the third day Hal sold 4 pumpkins and Dan sold 7. On the fourth day Hal
sold 7 and Dan sold 10. It Hal and Dan kept selling pumpkins in the same way,
how many pumpkins did Hal sell on the day Dan sold 19? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-14) Answer:
Daryl was 16, and Coralee was 8 When
Daryl was 11 years old and his sister, Coralee, was 3, they watched a television
show about hot-air balloons. Daryl started saving his money. When Daryl was
twice as old as Coralee, he took her on a ride in a hot-air balloon. How old
were Daryl and Coralee when they rode in the balloon?
Write to
help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-13) Answer:
8 inches Dean
works with baby animals at a zoo. This week he measured a giraffe, an ape, and a
tiger. The tiger had grown 4 inches less than the giraffe. The giraffe had grown
twice as much as the ape. The baby ape had grown 6 inches since it was measured
the last time. How many inches had the tiger grown? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-12)
Answer: 8 white, 6 red Annie
and Rob were playing a board game. During the game, they both collected white
chips and red chips. Each white chip was worth points and each red chip was
worth 3 points. At the end of the game, Annie had 14 chips worth 50 points in
all. How many chips of each color did she have? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-11) Answer:
oak-6 feet high; maple-2 feet high When
Sue planted them, the oak tree was three times as high as the maple tree. Both
trees grew about one foot a year. Now the oak tree is 13 feet high and the maple
tree is 9 feet high. How high were the trees when Sue planted them? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-10)
Answer: 32 days old Two
koalas were born this month at the zoo. Kippy is 27 days old and Katy is 3 days
old. Soon Kippy will be four times as old as Katy. How old will Kippy be then? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-9)
Answer: George-28; Ivan-17 Ivan
stopped, but George kept running for 11 more laps. By the end of the run-a-thon,
Ivan and George had run 45 laps around the school playground altogether. How
many laps had each boy run? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-8) Answer:
Odds-red; evens-yellow Make
a row of 30 flowers. The first flower and every other one after that one are
red. The rest of the flowers are yellow. What color is the 12th flower? What
color is the 27th flower? What color are the odd numbers? What color are the
even numbers? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-7) Answer:
11 chicks; 14 eggs left The
brown hen laid 12 eggs. Seven of them have hatched. The red hen laid 13 eggs.
Four of them have hatched. How many chicks in all? How many eggs are left? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-6) Answer:
most-Don; fewest-Donna Joan
has read six books. Karen has read one more book than Joan has read. Henry has
read two fewer books than Joan has read. Don has read twice as many books as
Henry has read. Donna has read five fewer books than Don has read. Who has read
the most books? Who has read the fewest books? Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-5) Answer:
down on the side of 15 mice & 2 cats; 1 mouse off first side; 5 mice off 1st
side & 4 mice off 2nd side Mice
weigh one pound. Cats weigh ten pounds. Cats and mice are playing on the seesaw.
On one side are fifteen mice and two cats. On the other side are three cats and
four mice. Draw the seesaw as it would look that way. Explain two ways to make
the seesaw balance. Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-4) Answer:
15 red total; 11 blue total; Carla has the most red blocks; Pat has the fewest
blue Carla
has six red blocks and four blue blocks. Don has two fewer red blocks and one
more blue block than Carla has. Pat has one more red block and three fewer blue
blocks than Don has. How many red blocks in all? How many blue blocks in all?
Who has the most red blocks? Who has the fewest blue blocks? 3A-3)
Answer: The seesaw tipped down to the first side with 4 dogs. To balance 1 dog
on the 1st side could exchange places with 3 mice & 3 cats of the 2nd side. Mice
weigh one pound. Cats weigh ten pounds. Dogs weigh one hundred pounds. The
animals are playing on the see saw. On one side are four dogs, two cats, and one
mouse. On the other side are two dogs, eight cats, and seven mice. Draw the
seesaw with the animals on each side. What can the animals do to make the seesaw
balance? Write to
help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-2) Answer:
4 students; 4 blue jars; 12 red jars; 42 paint jars We
have 24 students divided into 6 equal groups. They are sitting at tables
painting. Each table has one yellow paint jar, twice as many red jars, and twice
as many blue jars as red ones. How many students are in each group?____ How many
blue jars are on each table?____ How many red jars in all?___ How many paint
jars in all?___ Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures. 3A-1) Answer:
8 pencils each - I put 40 into 5 equal groups of 8 pencils each. We
have 40 pencils to be divided equally among Bob, Darin, Carl, George, and Meg.
How many pencils will each get? Write a sentence that tells what you had to do
to get the answer. Write
to help explain your best thinking using words, numbers, or pictures.
| |||
| Contact Math Department , Copyright 2002 | ||||