"Practicing Division Facts and Double Checking With Multiplication" is a worksheet that is designed to help students practice solving division facts with single-digit divisors. Each division problem is shown using a division bracket inside a rectangular box that separates each problem from the others. Students write the answer. Then, each box asks students to check their answer by writing it as a multiplication problem.

Pages contain 18 problems. Each page is also accompanied by directions at the top that tell students which division facts the page will help them practice. Fourth-grade pages only practice a few at a time with directions like "Let's Practice Division By 3s, 5s, and 9s." Fifth-grade worksheets have students practice "Division from ÷ 2 to ÷ 9."

It's important for students to practice division facts with single-digit divisors inside division brackets. This gets them used to seeing how long division problems will be displayed, so it doesn't seem as scary when it's time for them to divide larger numbers.

It can also be helpful for students to practice double-checking their answers. For example, students might solve a division problem like 27 ÷ 9 but then write it out as 9 x 3 = 27. When they solve long division problems in the future, they will know which numbers they can multiply to double-check their work.

For a little extra practice, have students write division problems as sets along with their matching multiplication problems. For example, the division problem 14 ÷ 2 = 7 can be rewritten as 14 ÷ 7 = 2. Then, students can write the multiplication problem 2 x 7 = 14.