Partial Quotients
Place Value Quotient
Using Basic Math Facts
Divide how you want!
Mystery Questions
100

26÷2

13

100

120÷4

What is the place value of the first digit in thee quotient?

30 & tens 

100

120 ÷ 4

30

100

34÷8

4 R 2
100

80÷4

20

200

86÷2

43


200

5600÷7

What is the place value of the first digit in the quotient?

800 & Hundreds 

200

280÷7

40

200

58÷7

8 R 2

200

What division equation is this number line showing?

A)20÷4

B)25÷3

C)20÷5

A)20÷4

300

186÷6

31


300

825 ÷ 6

What is the place value of the first digit of the quotient?

137 R 3

Hundreds


300

360÷6

60

300

132÷3

44

300

562÷7

(Use Base Ten Drawings)

80 R 2


400

208÷4

52


400

There are 798 pencils given to the school to give to each class. If there are 5 classes in the school, how many pencils will each class get?

What is the place value of the second digit of the quotient? 

159 R3

Tens

400

2,000÷5

400

400

1325÷2

662 R1

400

1823÷6

303 R 5

500

1512÷3

504


500

Madison has 516 pictures. She wants to put those into picture frames that can hold 4 pictures each. How many frames does Madison need?

What is the place value of the first digit in the quotient? 

129 

Hundreds 

500

4,500÷9

500

500

Ruby has 1509 candy bars. She wants to put them in bags of 3 to give out at school. How many bags will Ruby need?

503

500

Emma wants to make cakes. She buys 4 dozen eggs for her recipes. She needs to use 3 eggs for each cake. How many cakes can Emma make?

(Hint: This uses two operations) 

16

1. 1 dozen 12. To find total number of eggs we use 4x12 to get 48 total eggs. 

2. We then need to find out how many cakes Emma can make with 48 eggs if she needs 3 per cake. So we use 48÷3 to get 16.

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