All SSAT Elementary Level Math Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #321 : Number & Operations In Base Ten
When we subtract from a two digit number, the only number that changes in our answer is the tens position, and it will always go down by
. Mentally, we can subtract
from the number in the tens place to find our answer.
Example Question #322 : Number & Operations In Base Ten
When we subtract from a two digit number, the only number that changes in our answer is the tens position, and it will always go down by
. Mentally, we can subtract
from the number in the tens place to find our answer.
Example Question #45 : Add And Subtract 10 To Two Digit Numbers: Ccss.Math.Content.1.Nbt.C.5
When we subtract from a two digit number, the only number that changes in our answer is the tens position, and it will always go down by
. Mentally, we can subtract
from the number in the tens place to find our answer.
Example Question #1031 : Ssat Elementary Level Quantitative (Math)
Lisa had birthday parties to go to this summer. She has already gone to
of them. How many parties does she have left to go to this summer?
This is a subtraction problem because Lisa has alreayd gone to some of the parties that she was invited to, so she has less parties left to go to than she started with this summer.
We can start at and count back
.
Example Question #1211 : Common Core Math: Grade 2
The cat is inches long and the dog is
inches long. How much longer is the dog than the cat?
inches
inches
inches
inches
inches
inches
This is a subtraction problem because we want to know how much longer the dog is compared to the cat, or the difference between their lengths.
Example Question #392 : Operations
Mr. Bell has desks in his classroom, but he only needs
desks because he has
students. How many extra desks does he have?
This is a subtraction problem because we want to know how many desks are left over after all of Mr. Bell’s class sits at a desk. We take the number of desks in his room, and subtract the number of students that he has. .
Example Question #1032 : Ssat Elementary Level Quantitative (Math)
The pet store has goldfish in a tank. A teacher bought
goldfish for her school’s fish tank. How many goldfish does the pet store have left?
This is a subtraction problem because we want to know how many goldfish the pet store has left over after the teacher buys the first and takes them away from the store. We take the number of goldfish that the store had and then subtract the number that the teacher bought. .
Example Question #4 : Solving Problems Involving The Four Operations, And Identifying And Explaining Patterns In Arithmetic
Ali is hanging up flyers around her school. She started with flyers. She hung
flyers around the east side of the building, but she hung half as many flyers on the west side of the building. How many flyers does she have left?
To solve this problem, we first have to find our unknowns. Our unknowns are the number of flyers that she hung on the west side of the building and the number of flyers she has left over. We can set up equations for these unknowns by letting represent the flyers she hung on the west side and
represent the flyers that she has left.
because she hung half as many flyers on the west side as she hung on the east side. When we half something we always divide by
.
To find the total number of flyers that she hung we add the amount of flyers on the east side and the amount on the west side.
To find how many flyers she has left, we subtract that total flyers that were hung from the flyers that she started with.
Example Question #7 : Solve Two Step Word Problems Using The Four Operations: Ccss.Math.Content.3.Oa.D.8
Sara is hanging up flyers around her school. She started with flyers. She hung
flyers around the east side of the building, but she hung half as many flyers on the west side of the building. How many flyers does she have left?
To solve this problem, we first have to find our unknowns. Our unknowns are the number of flyers that she hung on the west side of the building and the number of flyers she has left over. We can set up equations for these unknowns by letting represent the flyers she hung on the west side and
represent the flyers that she has left.
because she hung half as many flyers on the west side as she hung on the east side. When we half something we always divide by
.
To find the total number of flyers that she hung we add the amount of flyers on the east side and the amount on the west side.
To find how many flyers she has left, we subtract that total flyers that were hung from the flyers that she started with.
Example Question #1033 : Ssat Elementary Level Quantitative (Math)
Megan is working on a science experiment. She needs to have of water. Based on the scale below, how much more water does she need to add?
Megan has of water, but she needs
. To find out how much more she needs we subtract.
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All SSAT Elementary Level Math Resources
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