Division • Topic 6 of 6

Word Problems

Division word problems test two skills at once: picking the right operation and then reading the remainder sensibly. The first move is to decide whether the problem is sharing or grouping. If a known number of people or boxes is given and you want how many each gets, it is sharing and the divisor is the number of groups. If a group size is given and you want how many such groups fit, it is grouping and the divisor is the group size. The harder, and more heavily tested, skill is interpreting the remainder, because the maths alone does not tell you what to do with the leftover. Sometimes you ignore it -- 50 students in full teams of 11 makes 4 teams with 6 left out. Sometimes you must round the quotient up -- to carry 125 students in buses of 40, 125 divided by 40 is 3 remainder 5, but 3 buses hold only 120, so you need a 4th bus for the last 5. The right answer depends entirely on the real situation, so children should always write the answer as a full sentence that makes sense in context, not just a bare number.

✅ Solved examples

1. Sita's mother made 84 ladoos and packed them equally into 7 boxes. How many ladoos are in each box?
This is a sharing problem: the number of boxes (7) is known. 84 / 7 = 12 with remainder 0, so each box holds 12 ladoos and none are left over.
2. There are 94 students going on a picnic and each mini-van carries 8 students. How many vans are needed to take everyone?
This is grouping: 94 / 8 = 11 remainder 6. Eleven vans carry 88 students, but 6 are still left, so one more van is needed. To take ALL students you need 11 + 1 = 12 vans -- a round-up-the-quotient situation.
3. Raju has 56 red marbles and 34 blue marbles. He shares them equally among 6 jars. How many marbles are in each jar?
A two-step problem. First find the total: 56 + 34 = 90 marbles. Then divide: 90 / 6 = 15. Each jar holds 15 marbles.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. 72 chocolates are shared equally among 9 children. How many does each child get?
Sharing: the number of children is known.
Think 9 times what is 72?
8 chocolates each (72 / 9 = 8)
2. A baker packs 50 buns into boxes that hold 8 buns each. How many full boxes can he pack, and how many buns are left?
Grouping with a remainder.
8 x 6 = 48.
6 full boxes, 2 buns left (50 / 8 = 6 remainder 2)
3. 38 children must be seated on benches, each bench holding 4 children. How many benches are needed so that every child has a seat?
38 / 4 leaves a remainder.
The leftover children still need a bench.
10 benches (9 benches seat 36, so 1 more is needed for the remaining 2)

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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