Addition & Subtraction
Addition and subtraction look deceptively simple, which is exactly why CTET Paper I leans on them so hard. The questions almost never ask you to add two numbers; they ask why a child added them wrong. A pupil who writes 35 + 27 = 512 has not failed arithmetic, she has failed place value, and the paper wants you to spot that. So this chapter works on two levels at once. You need the arithmetic itself watertight, carrying, borrowing across a zero, estimation, the mental shortcuts, and you need the pedagogy underneath it, the language of regrouping, base-ten blocks, the number line, clue words in word problems, and what a wrong answer tells you about a child's thinking. Treat every worked example below as two questions: what is the answer, and what would a seven-year-old get stuck on here.
Topics
⚡ Smart tips & memory hooks
Memory hooks and exam-smart tips to lock this chapter in and answer CTET MCQs quickly and accurately.
- Carry-over and borrowing are the same idea in reverse: 10 ones make 1 ten when adding, 1 ten becomes 10 ones when subtracting.
- Borrowing across a zero: regroup the hundreds first (4 becomes 3, giving 10 tens), then borrow a ten for the ones.
- Check any subtraction instantly: difference + subtrahend must rebuild the minuend.
- For numbers that are close together (203 - 198), count up instead of borrowing.
- Rounding rule in one line: nearest 10 looks at the ones digit, nearest 100 looks at the tens digit; 5 or more rounds up.
- In word problems, read for the structure (combine, take away, compare, missing part), not just the clue word, because context can flip the operation.
⚠️ Common mistakes & traps
CTET loves to test these exact confusions. Internalise each trap before exam day.
- Writing each column total side by side without carrying (26 + 17 = 313 instead of 43) - a place-value error, not carelessness.
- Subtracting the smaller digit from the larger in each column regardless of position (50 - 23 = 33), instead of borrowing.
- Forgetting to reduce the column that was borrowed from by 1.
- Mishandling a zero in the middle of the minuend when borrowing (402 - 135).
- Treating clue words as absolute rules - "more than" can mean add or compare depending on context.
- Rounding to the wrong place: checking the ones digit when rounding to the nearest hundred.
📈 CTET exam insight & PYQ analysis
🎴 Flashcards — instant recall
Tap a card to reveal the answer. Drill these until they are automatic.
📌 Quick revision
Chapter test
🏆 Vidaara CTET success checklist
You have truly mastered Addition & Subtraction when you can tick every box below.
- Recall every formula in this chapter without looking them up
- Solve each topic’s practice set with at least 80% accuracy
- Use the chapter shortcuts to cut your solving time in half
- Spot and avoid every common trap listed above
- Score 80%+ on the timed chapter test
📋 Chapter mastery scorecard
Track where you stand. Aim for the target before moving to the next chapter.
| Skill checkpoint | Target |
|---|---|
| Concept theory & formulas understood | 100% |
| Topic practice sets attempted (5 topics) | 5/5 |
| Best topic-test score | — → 80%+ |
| Chapter test score | — → 80%+ |
| Flashcards drilled to instant recall | 12 cards |
Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Carrying and borrowing (regrouping)
| Carry-over (addition) | Column sum 10 or more: write the ones digit, carry the ten to the next column. |
|---|---|
| Borrowing (subtraction) | Top digit smaller: take 1 from the left column (=10 here), reduce that column by 1. |
| Borrowing across a 0 | No tens to borrow? Take from hundreds first: 4 hundreds, 0 tens becomes 3 hundreds, 10 tens. |
| Check by inverse | Difference + Subtrahend = Minuend, and Sum - one addend = the other addend. |
Estimation and the number line
| Round to nearest 10 | Ones digit 5 or more rounds up, 4 or less stays; ones becomes 0. |
|---|---|
| Round to nearest 100 | Tens digit 50 or more rounds up, 49 or less stays; tens and ones become 0. |
| Front-end estimation | Use leading digits only: 432 + 289 is about 400 + 200 = 600. |
| Number-line jumps | Add by jumping right, subtract by jumping left; bridge through the nearest ten. |