Super Revision
110 MCQs Covering All Chapters
"Master everything you've learned in Class 3!"
Chapter-wise MCQ Practice
10 MCQs per chapter — 110 questions total
Your Progress: 0/110 Correct
You Are Ready Because...
"I know how to pause and think before acting."
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"I know how to choose a strategy that works."
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"I know how to explain my thinking."
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"I know mistakes are part of learning."
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🌟What Class 3 Has Given You
You think before you calculate.
You check if answers make sense.
You can explain why, not just what.
You stay calm when problems are tricky.
Skill 1: Stopping Before Acting
Estimation, sense checks, prediction
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⏸️ The Power of Pausing
Before solving any problem, a good mathematician asks:
"What do I already know?"
"About how big should my answer be?"
"Does this remind me of something I've seen before?"
This is called estimation and prediction. It helps you catch mistakes before they happen!
"What do I already know?"
"About how big should my answer be?"
"Does this remind me of something I've seen before?"
This is called estimation and prediction. It helps you catch mistakes before they happen!
Estimation
- Guess before calculating
- Round numbers to check
- Use "about" answers
Sense Checks
- Is this answer possible?
- Does this seem too big?
- Does this seem too small?
"A pause before solving is worth more than speed."
Skill 2: Choosing Tools
When to add, regroup, use arrays, interpret remainders
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🛠️ The Right Tool for the Job
You've learned many strategies this year. The skill isn't knowing them — it's choosing the right one!
When do I add? When things come together.
When do I subtract? When things are taken away or compared.
When do I multiply? When groups are equal.
When do I divide? When sharing or grouping fairly.
When do I add? When things come together.
When do I subtract? When things are taken away or compared.
When do I multiply? When groups are equal.
When do I divide? When sharing or grouping fairly.
Addition Tools
- Break apart numbers
- Use friendly numbers
- Add in steps
Multiplication Tools
- Arrays for seeing
- Skip counting
- Doubling/halving
"Choose your strategy; don't let the problem choose for you."
Skill 3: Explaining Clearly
What happened, why it happened, what stayed the same
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💬 Teaching Shows Understanding
If you can explain something to someone else, you truly understand it!
A good explanation answers:
"What did I do?" — The steps I took.
"Why did I do it?" — The reason behind my choice.
"What stayed the same?" — What didn't change in my work.
A good explanation answers:
"What did I do?" — The steps I took.
"Why did I do it?" — The reason behind my choice.
"What stayed the same?" — What didn't change in my work.
Show Your Steps
- Write each step clearly
- Use pictures or diagrams
- Label what you did
Explain Your Thinking
- Say "I chose this because..."
- Say "I noticed that..."
- Say "This reminds me of..."
"If you can teach it, you truly know it."
Skill 4: Staying Calm with Complexity
Mixed situations, no hints, no labels
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🧘 Calm is Your Superpower
In Class 4, problems won't always tell you what to do. There won't be chapter hints or method labels.
But that's okay! You've practiced:
Reading carefully — Understanding what's asked.
Trying something — Even if you're not sure.
Adjusting — Changing your approach if needed.
Staying patient — Not giving up too quickly.
But that's okay! You've practiced:
Reading carefully — Understanding what's asked.
Trying something — Even if you're not sure.
Adjusting — Changing your approach if needed.
Staying patient — Not giving up too quickly.
When Stuck
- Re-read the problem
- Draw a picture
- Try a simpler version
Growth Mindset
- "I can't do this... yet"
- "Mistakes help me learn"
- "Hard means I'm growing"
"Confusion is the beginning of understanding, not the end."
Thinking Reflection Engine
Reflect on how you solved a problem
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Reflections
🤔 Think About This:
A farmer has 47 apples. He packs them in boxes of 6. How many boxes can he fill, and how many apples are left over?
47 ÷ 6 = 7 remainder 5
Now reflect on your thinking...
1. What did I do first?
2. Why did I choose that approach?
3. What would I try next time?
Then vs Now
See how much you've grown!
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Comparisons
Multiplication
Class 2
I counted by ones: 4+4+4+4+4 to find 5 groups of 4.
→
I use multiplication: 5 × 4 = 20. I can even break it apart: 5×4 = (5×2)×2 = 10×2 = 20!
Class 3
The Readiness Mirror
Choose the thinking path — train judgment over obedience
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Thoughtful
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Scenarios
Situation:
You see a word problem about sharing 23 cookies among 4 friends. What do you do?
Which thinking path would you choose?
Teach the Future Child
Explain to a younger learner — teaching confirms understanding
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Lessons
A Class 2 student asks:
"Why do we need to know multiplication? Can't we just add?"
Your explanation (words, drawing, or example):
Sneak Peek: Class 4
Demystifying what comes next
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🔮 These Are Just Shortcuts!
In Class 4, you'll see some new symbols and methods. But here's the secret: they're just shortcuts for ideas you already understand!
Nothing in Class 4 will contradict what you've learned here. It will just be faster ways to write what you already know.
Nothing in Class 4 will contradict what you've learned here. It will just be faster ways to write what you already know.
Preview: What You'll See
New Symbols
- Parentheses: (3 + 4) × 2
- Order of operations
- More compact notation
Same ideas, shorter writing!
Faster Methods
- Standard algorithms
- Column methods
- Mental math tricks
Same thinking, more speed!
You Know
4 groups of 7
= 7 + 7 + 7 + 7
= 28
= 7 + 7 + 7 + 7
= 28
→
Class 4 Writes
4 × 7 = 28
Same idea, compact form!
Same idea, compact form!
"Class 4 math is Class 3 thinking with grown-up shortcuts."
Mixed Challenge
No chapter hints — you decide!
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Solved
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Streak
🎯 Real Life Doesn't Give Hints!
In real life, problems don't say "This is a division problem." You have to figure out what to do yourself. Let's practice that skill!
A bakery made 156 cupcakes. They pack them in boxes of 12. How many boxes do they need?
First, decide: What operation should I use?
Answer:
Meta-Quiz: How You Think
Not "what's the answer" but "which thinking is better"
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Correct
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Questions
🧠 This Quiz Is Different!
This quiz doesn't ask for answers. It asks you to judge thinking. Which student is ready? Which explanation shows understanding? Which mistake is healthy?
Loading question...
Gentle Practice Loop
Try → Think → Explain → Adjust — No pressure!
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Loops
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Streak
Step 1: Try This Problem
24 × 3 = ?
My answer:
My Readiness Checklist
Check off what you can do
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Tap each skill you feel confident about. Be honest — this is just for you!
I can pause and estimate before solving
✓
I can choose the right operation
✓
I can explain my steps clearly
✓
I can check if my answer makes sense
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I know what to do when I'm stuck
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I see mistakes as learning opportunities
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I stay calm when problems are tricky
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I've grown so much this year!
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Readiness Level:0%
Problem Decoder
Find the clues in word problems
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Decoded
🔍 Finding Hidden Clues
Word problems have clues that tell you what operation to use. Learn to spot them!
"in all" "altogether" "total" → Usually ADD
"left" "remaining" "difference" → Usually SUBTRACT
"each" "groups of" "rows" → Usually MULTIPLY
"share" "divide" "equally" → Usually DIVIDE
"in all" "altogether" "total" → Usually ADD
"left" "remaining" "difference" → Usually SUBTRACT
"each" "groups of" "rows" → Usually MULTIPLY
"share" "divide" "equally" → Usually DIVIDE
There are 7 shelves with 8 books on each shelf. How many books in all?
What clue words did you find?
What operation does this suggest?
Quick Check: 10 Questions
Review everything in 5 minutes
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0/10
Question
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Correct
Click "Start" to begin!
💌
Letter to My Future Self
Write a message to yourself in Class 4
Your Achievements
Badges you've earned this chapter
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0/10 Badges Earned
🪪
Identity
🪞
Reflector
📈
Growth
🧠
Thinker
👶🏫
Teacher
🎯
Solver
🔮
Meta
🔍
Decoder
🎓
Ready
💌
Letter
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👨👩👧Parent Readiness Dashboard
▼🎯 Chapter 13 Purpose
This chapter is different from others. It's meta-learning, not curriculum content. The goal is to help your child:
- Confirm their mathematical identity ("I am someone who can do math")
- Consolidate thinking skills for transition to Class 4
- Remove fear of "harder" math by demystifying what comes next
- Build self-awareness about their own thinking process
📊 Your Child's Progress
Identity
Not confirmed
Reflections
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Meta-Quiz
0/0
Readiness
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💡 Signs of Readiness for Class 4
- Stops before acting: Child pauses to understand problems before jumping in
- Chooses strategies: Can explain why they picked a certain method
- Explains thinking: Can teach concepts to others
- Handles mistakes well: Sees errors as learning opportunities, not failures
- Stays calm with difficulty: Doesn't panic when problems look unfamiliar
🔮 What Changes in Class 4
Help your child understand that Class 4 math is not "harder" — it's just more compact notation:
- Same concepts, shorter writing (parentheses, order of operations)
- Same strategies, faster execution (standard algorithms)
- Mixed problems without operation labels (real-world style)
- More independence in choosing approaches
"Class 4 math is Class 3 thinking with grown-up shortcuts."
🗣️ Conversation Starters
- "What's one thing you learned to do this year that felt really hard at first?"
- "How do you decide what operation to use in a word problem?"
- "What do you do now when you get stuck?"
- "What would you tell a Class 2 student about multiplication?"
- "What are you most proud of learning this year?"
📚 Recommended Next Steps
- Review the "Letter to Future Self" together — very powerful for reflection
- Celebrate specific skills, not just grades ("You explained your thinking so clearly!")
- Practice mixed problems occasionally over summer break
- Read the Safe Abstraction Preview section together
- Keep fostering a growth mindset — "yet" is the magic word
You Are Ready!
The completion signal
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🌟🎓🚀
"I know how to think when math gets harder."
I pause before I calculate.
I choose my strategy wisely.
I can explain my thinking.
I stay calm when problems are tricky.
I know mistakes help me learn.