The "Division Bingo With Single-Digit Divisors" worksheet has students solve division facts and find the answers on a bingo board. Fourth-grade pages show division problems in ovals. If the answer is on the bingo board, they color both the oval and the square on the bingo board red. If the answer isn't on the board, they cross the oval off. Pages practice certain single-digit division facts with instructions like "Let's Practice Division By 3s, 5s, and 8s."
There are horizontal division problems for students to solve below. They include the problems featured in the bingo game, but they also include other problems with the same divisors that are mentioned in the directions.
Fifth-grade worksheets allow for more creativity because there are no problems listed in the bingo section. Instead, teachers can fill in problems before making copies, or they can ask students to look at the numbers on the bingo board and write the corresponding division problems. Pages include single-digit divisors from 2 to 9 with practice division problems at the bottom of the page.
Students should practice division problems in many different ways to build fluency. Games can be a great way to do this, as they are more engaging than just answering basic division problems on a worksheet.
Division bingo can be played individually with worksheets, but you can also play it together as a class. Give students a bingo board and call out division problems. They have to look for the answer on their board. You could also work backward by giving students the answer, and they have to look at their bingo board for the correct division problem.
A few other activities could include color-by-division pages, where students have to find the answers to division problems and use the key to color them correctly. Division word find-style puzzles can be fun too, where students circle the correct division problems in the puzzle.


