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🎓 Math Word Problems: Strengthen Problem-Solving Skills

Apply math concepts to real-life situations with challenging word problems that develop critical thinking.

This entry is part 2 of 14 in the series Mathematics
Math Word Problems: Strengthen Problem-Solving Skills.
Apply math concepts to real-life situations with challenging word problems that develop critical thinking.

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Math Word Problems Mastery

Unlock the secrets of solving math word problems with this comprehensive Math Word Problems lesson quiz for grades 5-8! Word problems are where math meets the real world – they test not just your calculation skills but your reading comprehension and logical thinking. This interactive quiz teaches you the powerful CUBES strategy (Circle numbers, Underline the question, Box key math words, Eliminate unnecessary info, Solve and check) – a systematic approach that works for ANY word problem. You will learn to identify key math words that signal addition (total, sum, altogether), subtraction (difference, left, remaining), multiplication (product, each, times), and division (quotient, per, split equally). Master one-step, two-step, and multi-step problems – learning the logical order of operations (add then subtract, multiply then subtract, etc.). Conquer essential real-world problem types: distance-rate-time (d = rt), unit rate and "per" problems (finding cost per item to compare prices), percent problems (finding the part, whole, or percent using Part = Percent × Whole), discount and sale price calculations, and geometry applications (perimeter vs area). Each of the 10 questions includes detailed, lesson-style explanations that build your problem-solving strategy step by step. Complete all questions and become a confident word problem solver – ready for tests and real life!

The question tells you what you are solving for. Underlining it helps you stay focused on the goal.

Word problems are not just about math – they are about reading comprehension and problem-solving strategy. One excellent strategy is called CUBES: Circle the numbers, Underline the question, Box the key math words (like "total," "difference," "each," "per"), Eliminate unnecessary information, and Solve and check. Before you start calculating, you must understand what the problem is asking. Which step of CUBES tells you what you actually need to find?

"Left" or "left over" means what remains after removing some. That is subtraction.

Word problems use specific language to tell you which operation to use. For addition, look for words like: total, sum, altogether, combined, increased by, more than, plus, both, together, in all, added to. For subtraction, look for: difference, less than, fewer than, remaining, left over, how many more, minus, decreased by, take away, reduce. Read this problem: "Sarah had 45 stickers. She gave 12 stickers to her friend. How many stickers does Sarah have left?" Which operation does "left" signal?

Here, "each" tells you how many muffins fit in one box. You need to find how many groups of 6 fit into 24 – that is division.

Multiplication and division have their own key words. Multiplication words include: product, times, multiplied by, of (as in "half of"), twice, triple, each (when combined with a number of groups), per, at a rate of. Division words include: quotient, divided by, split equally, per, average, each (when sharing), out of, ratio. Read: "A bakery bakes 24 muffins. They put the muffins into boxes that hold 6 muffins each. How many boxes do they need?" What operation does the word "each" signal in this context?

First, find the total cost by adding. Second, subtract that total from the amount paid to find change.

Many word problems require TWO or more steps to solve. You cannot just add all the numbers you see – you must think about the logical order of operations. Here is a classic two-step problem: "Jake bought a video game for $45 and a controller for $30. He paid with a $100 bill. How much change did he receive?" What are the two steps you need to perform?

Step 1: 6 classrooms × 25 chairs = 150 chairs needed. Step 2: 150 - 40 = 110 chairs to buy.

Here is a more complex multi-step problem: "A school is buying new chairs for 6 classrooms. Each classroom needs 25 chairs. The school already has 40 chairs in storage. How many more chairs must they buy?" Solve step by step. First, find total chairs needed for all classrooms. Then, subtract the chairs they already have.

Use d = r × t. r = 55 mph, t = 3 hours. Multiply: 55 × 3 = 165 miles.

The distance-rate-time formula is one of the most useful real-world math relationships. Distance = Rate × Time (often written as d = rt). Rate is speed (like miles per hour or kilometers per hour). Time is how long you travel. Distance is how far you go. If you drive at 55 miles per hour for 3 hours, how far do you travel?

Divide total cost by number of sodas: $7.80 ÷ 12 = $0.65 per soda.

Unit rate problems ask: "How much for ONE item?" or "How much per unit?" The word "per" means "for each." To find a unit rate, divide the total cost by the number of items or total quantity. Example: "A 12-pack of soda costs $7.80. What is the cost per soda?" How do you calculate this?

150 = 0.30 × Whole, so Whole = 150 ÷ 0.30 = 500 students.

Percent word problems ask you to find the part, the whole, or the percent. The basic relationship is: Part = Percent × Whole. But remember to convert the percent to a decimal or fraction before multiplying! Example: "30% of the students in a school ride the bus. If 150 students ride the bus, how many students are in the entire school?" What is the equation to solve this?

Step 1: Find discount = 20% of $80 = 0.20 × 80 = $16. Step 2: Sale price = $80 - $16 = $64.

Discount word problems are common in real life. "A store is having a 20% off sale. A jacket originally costs $80. What is the sale price?" To solve: first find the discount amount, then subtract from original price. What are the two steps?

Fencing goes AROUND the garden, so you need the distance around – that is PERIMETER. Perimeter = 2 × (length + width) = 2 × (15 + 10) = 2 × 25 = 50 feet.

Geometry word problems ask you to find perimeter (distance around) or area (space inside). Read carefully: "A rectangular garden is 15 feet long and 10 feet wide. A fence is needed around the entire garden. How many feet of fencing are needed?" Does this problem ask for area or perimeter?

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Welcome to our Math Mastery Lessons and Quiz series!
Each lesson features 10 questions designed to teach and test your on problem-solving skills while reinforcing key mathematical concepts through detailed step-by-step explanations given along with every question.

📚 Further Learning Resources – Math Word Problems

Continue building your word problem skills with these trusted, free resources:

🧠 Did you know? The world’s oldest known mathematical word problem is over 4,000 years old! It comes from ancient Egypt and appears on the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus (c. 1650 BCE). It asks: “Divide 100 loaves among 5 men so that the shares are in arithmetic progression” – a word problem about sequences!

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