CTET · Study & Practice

Numbers & the Number System

AreaMathematics & Pedagogy DifficultyEasy to Moderate CTET weightage6-9 questions across the Mathematics and Maths-Pedagogy halves of CTET Paper I

Numbers is where CTET Paper I begins, and it carries more weight than most candidates expect. The Mathematics section tests whether you can actually do the arithmetic - read a place value chart, write a number in expanded form, convert XIV to 14 - while the pedagogy half asks something harder: do you understand how a six-year-old builds these ideas, and why she makes the mistakes she does. The two are tied together in almost every question. A typical item shows you a child writing 'five hundred six' as 56 and asks what the child has misunderstood; you score the mark only if you can name the missing concept (zero as a placeholder) rather than just spot the wrong answer. This chapter walks through the nine ideas the exam keeps returning to - counting, number names, place value, expanded form, comparing and ordering, patterns, parity, and basic Roman numerals - and it keeps the classroom in view throughout, because that is what CTET is really examining.

Topics

⚡ Smart tips & memory hooks

Memory hooks and exam-smart tips to lock this chapter in and answer CTET MCQs quickly and accurately.

  • Place value of a digit = the digit x the value of its column. In 347 the 4 means 4 x 10 = 40. Face value is just the digit (4).
  • Comparing numbers: count the digits first - more digits always wins. Only if digit counts match do you compare left to right.
  • Parity is decided by the LAST digit alone: ends in 0/2/4/6/8 = even, ends in 1/3/5/7/9 = odd. Front digits are irrelevant.
  • Operation parity: same kind adds to even (even+even, odd+odd both even); mixing gives odd. A product is odd only if every factor is odd.
  • Roman subtraction cases to memorise: IV=4, IX=9, XL=40, XC=90. Smaller before larger subtracts; smaller after larger adds.
  • Sum of the first n odd numbers is n^2 (1+3+5+7 = 16 = 4^2) - a quick check for odd-series questions.

⚠️ Common mistakes & traps

CTET loves to test these exact confusions. Internalise each trap before exam day.

  • Confusing face value with place value - in 3582 the face value of 8 is 8 but its place value is 80.
  • Dropping the placeholder zero - writing "five hundred six" as 56 instead of 506, or expanding 605 without the empty tens column.
  • Comparing or ordering by the leading digit instead of counting digits first - calling 89 bigger than 123 because 8 beats 1.
  • Believing odd + odd = odd; it is even, because the two unpaired units join to form a new pair.
  • Judging parity from the first digit - 3214 is even because it ends in 4, not odd because it starts with 3.
  • Writing 4 as IIII in Roman numerals - a symbol repeats at most three times, so 4 is IV.

📈 CTET exam insight & PYQ analysis

Numbers appears in every CTET Paper I, typically 6-9 marks split between the Mathematics content questions and the Maths-Pedagogy questions. Content items are direct: state the place value of a digit, write a number in expanded form, convert a Roman numeral (XIV, XL, XCIX are favourites), continue a pattern, or decide parity. The pedagogy items are scenario-driven and higher-value - a child writes 506 as 56 (zero as placeholder), orders 35, 123, 87 wrongly by leading digit (must group by digit count), or insists odd + odd is odd - and you must name the misconception and the concrete remedy (base-10 blocks, pairing counters, number-line skip counting). Examiners reliably reward candidates who can explain the underlying place value or parity idea rather than just produce the right answer.

🎴 Flashcards — instant recall

Tap a card to reveal the answer. Drill these until they are automatic.

Face value vs place value of 8 in 3582?Tap to reveal
Face value 8; place value 80 (8 x 10, tens place)
The four place columns right to left?Tap to reveal
Ones (1), Tens (10), Hundreds (100), Thousands (1000)
Write 506 in words and explain the zero.Tap to reveal
Five hundred six; the 0 is a placeholder for zero tens
Expanded form of 1234?Tap to reveal
1000 + 200 + 30 + 4
Comparing numbers - first step?Tap to reveal
Count the digits; more digits = larger number
Even or odd is decided by which digit?Tap to reveal
The units (last) digit only
Odd + Odd = ?Tap to reveal
Even (e.g. 3 + 5 = 8)
A product is odd only when...?Tap to reveal
Every factor is odd; any even factor makes it even
Roman values of I, V, X, L, C?Tap to reveal
1, 5, 10, 50, 100
Roman numeral for 4 and 9?Tap to reveal
IV (5-1) and IX (10-1)
Convert XCIX.Tap to reveal
99 (XC = 90, IX = 9)
Sum of the first n odd numbers?Tap to reveal
n^2 (1 + 3 + 5 + 7 = 16 = 4^2)

📌 Quick revision

Numbers and the number system underpins all of CTET Paper I maths. Counting rests on stable order, one-to-one correspondence and cardinality, and grows through forward, backward and skip counting. Place value - the value of a digit from its column (ones, tens, hundreds, thousands) - drives number names, expanded form, comparison and ordering, with the face-value-versus-place-value distinction and zero-as-placeholder being the most tested traps. Comparing and ordering both start by counting digits, then compare left to right. Patterns build algebraic thinking through arithmetic, geometric, square, triangular and consecutive-number rules. Parity is fixed by the units digit (even ends 0/2/4/6/8, odd ends 1/3/5/7/9), with even+even and odd+odd both even and a product odd only when all factors are odd. Roman numerals use I=1, V=5, X=10, L=50, C=100 with add, subtract (IV, IX, XL, XC) and repetition rules. Throughout, the exam pairs the arithmetic with the classroom - naming children's misconceptions and the concrete remedies that fix them.

Chapter test

🏆 Vidaara CTET success checklist

You have truly mastered Numbers & the Number System 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 checkpointTarget
Concept theory & formulas understood100%
Topic practice sets attempted (9 topics)9/9
Best topic-test score— → 80%+
Chapter test score— → 80%+
Flashcards drilled to instant recall12 cards