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Quizzes > Quizzes for Business > Education

Grade 4 Mathematics Assessment Quiz Challenge

Test Your Grade 4 Math Skills Today

Difficulty: Moderate
Questions: 20
Learning OutcomesStudy Material
Colorful paper art depicting elements related to Grade 4 Mathematics Assessment Quiz.

Use this Grade 4 Mathematics Assessment Quiz to check your skills in number sense, fractions, geometry, and data with 15 quick multiple-choice questions. You'll spot gaps and build confidence before class or a test. For extra practice, try the math practice quiz or review basics in the basic math assessment .

What is 6 x 4?
28
22
24
20
Multiplying 6 by 4 means adding 4 six times, which equals 24. Therefore, the correct product is 24.
Which fraction is equivalent to 1/2?
1/3
2/3
3/4
2/4
When you multiply the numerator and denominator of 1/2 by 2, you get 2/4. Thus, 2/4 is equivalent to 1/2.
What is the perimeter of a rectangle with length 5 cm and width 3 cm?
16 cm
15 cm
8 cm
10 cm
Perimeter of a rectangle is 2 Ã- (length + width), so 2 Ã- (5 + 3) = 16 cm. Hence, the perimeter is 16 cm.
The table below shows votes for favorite fruits: Apples: 6 votes, Bananas: 4 votes, Cherries: 8 votes. Which fruit received the fewest votes?
Oranges
Cherries
Bananas
Apples
Bananas have 4 votes, which is fewer than apples (6) and cherries (8). Therefore, bananas received the fewest votes.
Which digit is in the hundreds place in the number 5,672?
7
6
5
2
In 5,672 the digits represent thousands, hundreds, tens, and ones respectively. The digit 6 is in the hundreds place.
What is the quotient and remainder when 47 is divided by 5?
10 R3
9 R2
9 R3
8 R4
Dividing 47 by 5 gives a quotient of 9 because 5 Ã- 9 = 45, with a remainder of 2. Thus the result is 9 R2.
Which fraction is larger: 3/4 or 2/3?
They are equal
3/4
Cannot determine
2/3
Converting to decimals gives 0.75 and approximately 0.666, so 3/4 is larger than 2/3. Therefore, 3/4 is the larger fraction.
What is the area of a rectangle with length 7 cm and width 4 cm?
22 cm²
11 cm²
14 cm²
28 cm²
Area of a rectangle is length Ã- width, so 7 cm Ã- 4 cm = 28 cm². Hence, 28 cm² is the correct area.
The bar graph shows the number of books sold each day: Monday: 5, Tuesday: 8, Wednesday: 6, Thursday: 7. On which day were 8 books sold?
Wednesday
Tuesday
Thursday
Monday
The bar for Tuesday reaches 8, which is the only day with eight books sold. Thus the correct day is Tuesday.
Sarah has 3 packs of pencils, and each pack contains 12 pencils. How many pencils does she have in total?
15
24
36
9
Multiply the number of packs by pencils per pack: 3 Ã- 12 = 36. Therefore, Sarah has 36 pencils.
What is the value of the digit 5 in the number 5384?
5000
500
50
5
The digit 5 is in the thousands place, so it represents 5,000 in the number 5384.
What is the area of a triangle with base 6 cm and height 4 cm?
24 cm²
12 cm²
8 cm²
10 cm²
Area of a triangle is 1/2 Ã- base Ã- height = 0.5 Ã- 6 cm Ã- 4 cm = 12 cm². So the area is 12 cm².
Emily had 50 marbles. She gave 17 to John and then divided the remaining marbles equally among 3 friends. How many marbles did each friend get?
10
9
12
11
After giving John 17 marbles, 50 âˆ' 17 = 33 remain. Dividing 33 by 3 friends gives 11 each. So each friend gets 11 marbles.
Which fraction is equivalent to 2/3?
4/6
2/5
3/5
3/4
Multiplying numerator and denominator of 2/3 by 2 gives 4/6. Therefore, 4/6 is equivalent to 2/3.
The table shows the number of books read by students: Alex: 3, Beth: 7, Carl: 5, Dana: 7. How many more books did Beth read than Alex?
3
2
5
4
Beth read 7 books and Alex read 3 books. The difference is 7 âˆ' 3 = 4, so Beth read 4 more books than Alex.
A rectangle has an area of 36 cm². If its length is 9 cm, what is its width?
5 cm
4 cm
3 cm
6 cm
Area = length Ã- width, so width = area / length = 36 cm² / 9 cm = 4 cm. Therefore, the width is 4 cm.
Which fraction is larger: 5/8 or 3/5?
They are equal
Cannot determine
3/5
5/8
Converting to decimals gives 0.625 for 5/8 and 0.6 for 3/5, so 5/8 is larger. Thus, 5/8 is the larger fraction.
A baker has 250 cookies and packs them into boxes of 8 cookies each. How many full boxes can he fill and how many cookies will be left?
31 R2
31 R4
32 R2
30 R10
Dividing 250 by 8 gives 31 with a remainder of 2 because 8 Ã- 31 = 248. Therefore, he fills 31 boxes with 2 cookies remaining.
A rectangular garden has a perimeter of 30 m. If its length is 8 m, what is its width?
6 m
5 m
8 m
7 m
Perimeter = 2 Ã- (length + width) so 30 = 2 Ã- (8 + width). Dividing by 2 gives 8 + width = 15, so width = 15 âˆ' 8 = 7 m.
Lisa read 2/3 of a book on Monday and 1/6 of the book on Tuesday. What fraction of the book is left unread?
1/6
5/6
1/2
1/3
Lisa read 2/3 + 1/6 = 4/6 + 1/6 = 5/6 of the book. Subtracting from 1 gives 1 âˆ' 5/6 = 1/6 remaining. Thus, 1/6 is unread.
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Learning Outcomes

  1. Apply multiplication and division to solve problems
  2. Identify equivalent fractions and compare their values
  3. Calculate perimeter and area of simple shapes
  4. Interpret data from tables and bar graphs
  5. Solve word problems using number sense strategies
  6. Demonstrate understanding of place value concepts

Cheat Sheet

  1. Master Multiplication and Division - Roll up your sleeves and tackle multi-digit multiplication and division with flair. Practice with remainders - for example, 9,375 ÷ 7 = 1,339 remainder 2 - to see how leftovers work in real life. Sharpen your calculation speed and confidence today!
  2. Understand Equivalent Fractions - Become a fraction detective by spotting pairs like 1/2 and 4/8 that look different but are actually the same. Create your own equivalent fractions and watch your fraction toolbox fill up with powerful tricks. It's a fun puzzle every time!
  3. Compare Fractions - Line up fractions side by side by finding common denominators or using friendly benchmarks like 1/2 and 1. Decide which slice of the pie is bigger by converting or visualizing on a number line. Comparing fractions has never been this clear!
  4. Calculate Perimeter and Area - Imagine painting the outline of a garden (perimeter) and then filling it in with flowers (area). Use Perimeter = sum of all sides and Area = length × width to plan any project perfectly. Geometry meets real life in a snap!
  5. Interpret Data from Graphs - Become a data detective by reading bar graphs and tables to solve everyday mysteries - like which ice cream flavor is most popular. Extract numbers, compare categories, and draw conclusions that wow your friends and teachers. Graphs tell stories!
  6. Solve Word Problems - Turn math into storytelling as you solve multi-step puzzles with addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. Break each problem into bite-size steps, and show off your number sense by finding clever shortcuts. Word problems are your new adventure!
  7. Understand Place Value - Picture each digit as part of a giant team where moving left makes it worth ten times more. In 987,654 the 9 stands for 900,000 - pretty huge! Mastering place value up to 1,000,000 sets the stage for all future math.
  8. Multiply Fractions by Whole Numbers - Mix whole numbers and fractions to whip up new numerical recipes: 7 × 1/8 = 7/8, for example. Practice multiplying and simplifying so you can breeze through recipes, craft projects, and real-world measurements. Fractions can be fun!
  9. Convert Fractions to Decimals - Turn fractions with denominators of 10 or 100 into neat decimals - like 91/100 becoming 0.91. Plot them on a number line, and watch fractions transform into decimals right before your eyes. It's like magic math!
  10. Measure Angles - Grab a protractor and unlock the world of angles. Learn to identify acute, obtuse, and right angles, then measure them precisely on paper or in real life. Geometry is all around you - start exploring!
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