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6 th. Teammate Selection Select a 6 th grade teammate. 1,000,000. 500,000. 300,000. Comparing and ordering fractions 1. Comparing and Ordering Fractions & Dec. Are You Smarter Than a 6 th Grader?. 175,000. 100,000. Add or subtract Mixed Numbers 3. Add or subtract Mixed Numbers 4.
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1,000,000 500,000 300,000 Comparing and ordering fractions 1 Comparing and Ordering Fractions & Dec. Are You Smarter Than a 6th Grader? 175,000 100,000 Add or subtract Mixed Numbers 3 Add or subtract Mixed Numbers 4 50,000 GCF & Prime Factorization 5 GCF & Prime Factorization 6 25,000 10,000 Estimating sums or differences 7 Estimating sums or differences 8 5,000 2,000 Converting between fractions and decimals 9 Divisibility Rules 10 1,000 Save Copy Peek
6th Grade Topic 1 Question • Order the fractions from least to greatest.
6th Grade Topic 2 Question • Order the fractions and decimals from least to greatest.
6th Grade Topic 3 Question • Add. Write the answer in simplest form.
6th Grade Topic 4 Question • Subtract. Write your answer in simplest form.
6th Grade Topic 5 Question • Find the greatest common factor of 27, 90, 135, and 72.
6th Grade Topic 5 Answer • GCF is 9.
6th Grade Topic 6 Question • Write the prime factorization of 280.
6th Grade Topic 7 Question • Estimate the sum.
6th Grade Topic 8 Question • Estimate the difference.
6th Grade Topic 9 Question • Question A: Convert to a decimal. • Question B: Convert 3.68 to a fraction and write the answer in simplest form.
6th Grade Topic 9 Answer • Question A: 5.625 • Question B:
6th Grade Topic 10 Question • Create a 5 digit number that is divisible by 2, 3, 4, 6, and 9.
6th Grade Topic 10 Answer • Your answer must have the following: • 5 digits • End in an even number • The digits must add up to a number divisible by 9 • The last two digits must form a number divisible by 4
Million Dollar QuestionGrade Level Topic 11 Type in the topic for the question
1,000,000 Question • Students at a school dance formed equal teams to play a game. When they formed teams of 3,4,5,or 6, there was always one person left out. What is the smallest number of students who could have been at the dance?
1,000,000 Answer • 61 students. • The least common multiple of the numbers is 60. Since, 3, 4, 5, and 6 go into 60 evenly, and there was one student leftover, there would be 61 students.
Thanks for Playing • I am smarter • Than a • 6th grader!