Mathematics: First Quarter-Week 1
Mathematics: First Quarter-Week 1
MATHEMATICS
First Quarter-Week 1:
Use the divisibility rules for 2, 3, 5, 6, 9 and 10 to
find common factors of numbers
What I Need to Know
Look at the picture. What is in the picture?
What I Know
Read, analyze and answer each questions carefully about divisibility rules. Encircle the letter
of the correct answer.
1. If the number ends in 0 or 5, it is divisible by what number?
A. 2 C. 5
B. 3 D. 10
2. Which of the following numbers is divisible by 2?
A. 1
275 C. 3 697
B. 2 586 D. 4 149
3. Which of the numbers below is divisible by 5 but not by 2?
A. 12 152 C.12 395
B. 12 200 D. 12 484
Drill:
Counting by 2’s
2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20
Counting by 5’s
5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
Counting by 5’s
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Shaira has 70 collected stamps. Can she able to share that equally to 2 friends? 5
friends? 10 friends?
To solve the problem, you need to know if 2, 5 and 10 are factors of 70 or if 70 is
divisible by 2, 5 and 10.
To see if the number is divisible by 2, 5 or 10, test by checking the ones digit
DIVISIBILITY TEST 70
By 2: Is the ones digit 0,2,4,6 or 8? YES
By 5: Is the ones digit 0 or 5? YES
By 10: Is the ones digit 0? YES
So, Shaira can share her collected stamps to her 2 friends, to her 5 friends and even to her
10 friends.
What’s More
Guided Practice:
Which of the following numbers are divisible by:
2? ___________________________________________________________
5? ___________________________________________________________
10? ___________________________________________________________
45 98 320 1 465 3 256 23 960
92 135 786 2 990 8 675 45 973
Independent Practice:
A. Encircle all the numbers that are divisible by 2.
63 36 74 45 12 41
A whole number that ends with 0 or 5 is divisible by 5 and a whole number that
ends with zero is divisible by 10.
What I Can Do
Directions: Use divisibility rules to help you solve the following problems.
1. Frances has a collection of 672 stamps. She wants to place the stamps in 2
envelopes. How many stamps are there in each envelope?
A. 330 C. 334
B. 332 D. 336
2. The number of books in Karla’s collection is divisible by 2,5 and 10. She has more
than 11 books and fewer than 25 books. How many books does Karla have?
A. 18 C. 22
B. 20 D. 24
What’s In
Review:
1. Can 486 be divided by 2? ______
2. Can 728 be divided by 5? ______
3. Can 784 be divided by 2? ______
4. Can 400 be divided by 10? ______
5. Can 965 be divided by 5? ______
What’s New
Nena’s garden has 414 bougainvillea plants. She wants to arrange them in either
rows of 3, 6 or 9. Which are the possible arrangements of the plants?
To solve the problem, you need to know if 3 6 or 9 are factors of 414 or if 414 is
divisible by 3, 6 or 9.
What is It
A number is divisible by 3 if the sum of the digits is divisible by 3
A number is divisible by 6 if it is divisible by both 2 and 3
A number is divisible by 9 if the sum of the digits is divisible by 9
So, Nena can arrange her 414 bougainvillea plants in either rows of 3, rows of 6 or
rows of 9.
What’s More
Guided Practice:
Add the digits then check if it is divisible by 3, 6, and 9.
Example:
Sum of the digits 3 6 9
a. 144 1+4+4=9 √ √ √
1. 996 9 + 9 + 6 = ____
2. 2 024 2 + 0 + 2 + 4 = ____
3. 72 7 + 2 = ____
4. 1 068 1 + 0 + 6 + 8 = ____
5. 472 4 + 7 + 2 = ____
Independent Practice:
What I Can Do
A. Analyze and answer the following questions.
3. Marjorie wants to arrange her 186 books in three rows. Would it be possible?
Read, analyze and answer each question about divisibility rules. Encircle the letter of
the correct answer.
9. 3 is a factor of ______.
A. 642 C.772
B.653 D. 791
B. Put a check under each column to identify whether each number is divisible by 3, 6
or 9.
3 6 9
528
242
624
852
324
990
Prepared by:
EVANGELINE P. ALZATE
MT-II, Gloria Central School
Answer Key:
Module 1:
What I Know: What’s More:
Lesson 1: Guide Practice
Lesson 2:
What’s In What’s More: Guided Practice:
Review:
5. Yes
4. Yes
3. Yes
2. No
1. Yes
B. Put a check under each column to identify whether each number is divisible by 3, 6
or 9.