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KS2 Mathematics Paper 2: reasoning 2023
๐ก How to use this Interactive Exam
- โ Try it first: Solve the question on paper before checking the solution.
- ๐ Three-Layer Solutions: We explain Why, then How, then What it means.
- ๐ Visual Learning: All diagrams are interactive vectors for clarity.
- ๐ซ No Calculators: This is a non-calculator reasoning paper.
๐ Table of Contents
- Question 1 (Time)
- Question 2 (Ordering Numbers)
- Question 3 (Coordinates)
- Question 4 (Pictograms)
- Question 5 (Logic/Properties)
- Question 6 (Money)
- Question 7 (Sequences)
- Question 8 (Rounding)
- Question 9 (Circle Properties)
- Question 10 (Reverse Operations)
- Question 11 (Place Value)
- Question 12 (Symmetry)
- Question 13 (Fractions of Amounts)
- Question 14 (Angles)
- Question 15 (Fractions Number Line)
- Question 16 (Rate)
- Question 17 (Division with Remainder)
- Question 18 (Fraction Problems)
- Question 19 (Missing Number Division)
- Question 20 (Long Multiplication)
- Question 21 (Unit Conversion)
- Question 22 (Area Fractions)
- Question 23 (Ratio/Percentage)
- Question 24 (Percentages of Amounts)
- Question 25 (Mass and Division)
- Question 26 (Algebra Formula)
Question 1 (1 mark)
Circle the clock that shows 5 minutes past 11.
Worked Solution
Step 1: Understanding the Clock Face
What does “5 minutes past 11” mean?
The time is 11:05.
The hour hand (short hand) should be pointing at 11 (or just slightly past it).
The minute hand (long hand) counts the minutes. Each number on the clock represents 5 minutes. So, “5 minutes past” means the long hand points to 1 (because \(1 \times 5 = 5\) minutes).
Step 2: Identifying the Correct Clock
Let’s check the clocks from left to right:
- Clock 1: Hour hand is near 11. Minute hand is at 1. This shows 11:05.
- Clock 2: Hour hand is near 1. Minute hand is at 11. This shows 5 minutes to 1 (or 12:55).
- Clock 3: Hour hand is near 11. Minute hand is at 5. This shows 11:25.
- Clock 4: Hour hand is near 10. Minute hand is at 1. This shows 10:05.
Final Answer:
The first clock (far left).
โ (1 mark)
Question 2 (1 mark)
Write these temperatures in order, starting with the lowest.
lowest _______________________________________
Worked Solution
Step 1: Understanding Negative Numbers
Why do we check the negative signs?
The “lowest” temperature means the coldest. On a thermometer, negative numbers are colder than positive numbers. The larger the number after the minus sign, the colder it is.
Step 2: Sorting the Numbers
Let’s look at the negative numbers first: \(-4\) and \(-10\).
\(-10\) is colder (lower) than \(-4\).
So, the order starts: -10ยฐC, -4ยฐC.
Now look at the positive numbers: \(6, 1, 3\).
Ordering these from smallest to largest: 1ยฐC, 3ยฐC, 6ยฐC.
Final Answer:
-10ยฐC, -4ยฐC, 1ยฐC, 3ยฐC, 6ยฐC
โ (1 mark)
Question 3 (1 mark)
ABC is a triangle.
What are the coordinates of point C?
( _____ , _____ )
Worked Solution
Step 1: Reading the X-coordinate
Why do we start with x?
Coordinates are written as \((x, y)\). We always go “along the corridor” (horizontal x-axis) before going “up the stairs” (vertical y-axis).
Look at point C. Follow the grid line down to the bottom axis (the x-axis).
It aligns with the number 6.
Step 2: Reading the Y-coordinate
Now, go back to point C and look across to the side axis (the y-axis).
It aligns with the number 2.
Final Answer:
( 6 , 2 )
โ (1 mark)
Question 4 (1 mark)
Some children choose their favourite zoo animal.
The pictogram shows the results.
How many more children choose tiger than elephant?
Worked Solution
Step 1: Reading the Key
The key shows that one full circle = 2 children.
This implies that half a circle = 1 child.
Step 2: Calculating Totals
Tiger: There are 6 full circles.
\[ 6 \times 2 = 12 \text{ children} \]
Elephant: There are 2 full circles and 1 half circle.
\[ (2 \times 2) + 1 = 4 + 1 = 5 \text{ children} \]
Step 3: Finding the Difference
“How many more” means we need to subtract.
\[ 12 – 5 = 7 \]
Final Answer:
7
โ (1 mark)
Question 5 (1 mark)
Cars and motorbikes are parked in a street.
Stefan counts 3 motorbikes and 5 cars.
He counts 28 wheels altogether.
Explain why Stefan cannot be correct.
Worked Solution
Step 1: Calculate the Wheels on the Cars
There are 5 cars. Each car has 4 wheels.
\[ 5 \times 4 = 20 \text{ wheels} \]
Step 2: Calculate the Wheels on the Motorbikes
There are 3 motorbikes. Each motorbike has 2 wheels.
\[ 3 \times 2 = 6 \text{ wheels} \]
Step 3: Check the Total
Total wheels = Car wheels + Motorbike wheels
\[ 20 + 6 = 26 \text{ wheels} \]
Stefan counted 28 wheels, but there are only 26. This is why he cannot be correct.
Example Explanation:
“5 cars have 20 wheels and 3 motorbikes have 6 wheels. 20 + 6 = 26, which is not 28.”
โ (1 mark)
Question 6 (1 mark)
Kirsty buys 1 litre of apple juice for ยฃ1.39.
She pays with a ยฃ5 note.
How much change does Kirsty get?
ยฃ
Worked Solution
Step 1: Identifying the Operation
Why subtract?
To find change, we subtract the cost of the item (ยฃ1.39) from the amount paid (ยฃ5.00).
Calculation: \[ 5.00 – 1.39 \]
Step 2: Doing the Subtraction
Using column subtraction:
5.00
– 1.3 9
——-
3.6 1
Alternatively, count up from ยฃ1.39 to ยฃ5.00:
- 1.39 to 1.40 = 1p
- 1.40 to 2.00 = 60p
- 2.00 to 5.00 = ยฃ3.00
- Total = ยฃ3.61
Final Answer:
ยฃ3.61
โ (1 mark)
Question 7 (1 mark)
Here is a number sequence.
75 50 25 _____ _____
Write the next two numbers in the sequence.
Worked Solution
Step 1: Finding the Rule
Look at the gap between the numbers:
- 75 to 50 is subtract 25.
- 50 to 25 is subtract 25.
The rule is: Subtract 25 each time.
Step 2: Calculating the Next Numbers
First missing number: \[ 25 – 25 = 0 \]
Second missing number: \[ 0 – 25 = -25 \]
Final Answer:
0 and -25
โ (1 mark)
Question 8 (1 mark)
In 2012, there were 24,372 schools in the United Kingdom.
Round the number of schools to the nearest hundred.
Worked Solution
Step 1: Identifying the Columns
The number is 24,372.
The hundreds digit is 3 (representing 300).
We need to decide whether to stay at 300 or round up to 400.
Step 2: Checking the Decider Digit
Look at the digit to the right of the hundreds (the tens column). It is 7.
Rule: If the digit is 5 or more, round up.
Since 7 is more than 5, we round the 300 up to 400.
Final Answer:
24,400
โ (1 mark)
Question 9 (1 mark)
Here are some diagrams showing parts of a circle.
Match each diagram to the name of the dashed line.
Worked Solution
Step 1: Identifying the Parts
- Diagram 1 (Top): The line goes all the way across the circle through the centre. This is the diameter.
- Diagram 2 (Middle): The line goes from the centre to the edge. This is the radius.
- Diagram 3 (Bottom): The dashed line is the edge of the circle itself. This is the circumference.
Step 2: Matching
Final Answer:
Top Diagram โ Diameter
Middle Diagram โ Radius
Bottom Diagram โ Circumference
โ (1 mark)
Question 10 (1 mark)
Ken thinks of a number.
He divides it by 3.
The answer is 72.
What number was Ken thinking of?
Worked Solution
Step 1: Using the Inverse Operation
Why use the inverse?
Ken started with a number, divided by 3, and got 72.
To go backward to the start, we must do the opposite of dividing by 3.
The opposite of division is multiplication. So, we multiply by 3.
Calculation: \[ 72 \times 3 \]
Step 2: Calculation
Partition 72 into 70 and 2.
\[ 70 \times 3 = 210 \]
\[ 2 \times 3 = 6 \]
\[ 210 + 6 = 216 \]
Final Answer:
216
โ (1 mark)
Question 11 (2 marks)
Write the number that is one thousand more than 19,039.
Write the number that is one hundred less than 19,039.
Worked Solution
Part 1: One Thousand More
Why? “More” means add. We focus on the thousands digit.
Number: 19,039
If we add 1,000 to 19,000, we get 20,000.
\[ 19,039 + 1,000 = 20,039 \]
Part 2: One Hundred Less
Why? “Less” means subtract. We focus on the hundreds digit.
Number: 19,039
There is a 0 in the hundreds column. We need to exchange/borrow from the thousands.
\[ 19,039 – 100 \]
Think of it as 190 hundreds – 1 hundred = 189 hundreds.
So, 18,939.
Final Answer:
20,039
18,939
โ (2 marks)
Question 12 (1 mark)
Draw all the lines of symmetry on this shape.
Use a ruler.
Worked Solution
Step 1: Identifying Symmetry
What is a line of symmetry?
It is a line that acts like a mirror. If you fold the shape along the line, both halves match exactly.
Look at the shape vertically (up and down) and horizontally (left and right).
Step 2: Drawing the Lines
1. Vertical Line: Goes straight down the middle, through the top point and the bottom point.
2. Horizontal Line: Goes straight across the middle.
Final Answer:
Two lines drawn (one vertical, one horizontal).
โ (1 mark)
Question 13 (1 mark)
\( \frac{1}{5} \) of a number is 22.
What is the number?
Worked Solution
Step 1: Visualizing the Problem
Imagine the whole number is a chocolate bar divided into 5 equal pieces.
We are told that 1 piece (one fifth) is equal to 22.
Step 2: Calculation
If one part is 22, and there are 5 parts in total, we must multiply by 5.
\[ 22 \times 5 \]
\[ 20 \times 5 = 100 \]
\[ 2 \times 5 = 10 \]
\[ 100 + 10 = 110 \]
Final Answer:
110
โ (1 mark)
Question 14 (1 mark)
Measure angle a.
a is ยฐ
Worked Solution
Step 1: Using a Protractor
How to measure:
- Place the centre point of the protractor on the vertex (corner) of the angle.
- Align the zero line of the protractor with the horizontal bottom line.
- Read the scale that starts at 0 on the right-hand side (the inner scale on most protractors).
- Follow the scale around to where the second line points.
Step 2: Checking the Type of Angle
The angle is wider than a right angle ($90^\circ$) but a straight line ($180^\circ$).
This is an obtuse angle.
The measurement is approximately 130 degrees.
Final Answer:
130ยฐ (Accept 128ยฐ to 132ยฐ)
โ (1 mark)
Question 15 (1 mark)
Here are four fractions.
Write the fractions in the correct place on the number line.
Worked Solution
Step 1: Finding a Common Denominator
To order fractions, it helps to give them the same bottom number (denominator).
The denominators are 3, 6, 4, 2.
The number 12 is in all of their times tables.
- \( \frac{1}{6} = \frac{2}{12} \)
- \( \frac{1}{4} = \frac{3}{12} \)
- \( \frac{1}{3} = \frac{4}{12} \)
- \( \frac{1}{2} = \frac{6}{12} \)
Step 2: Placing on the Line
The number line is divided into 12 small sections.
1. Count 2 marks along: Place \( \frac{1}{6} \).
2. Count 3 marks along: Place \( \frac{1}{4} \).
3. Count 4 marks along: Place \( \frac{1}{3} \).
4. Count 6 marks along (halfway): Place \( \frac{1}{2} \).
Final Answer:
Left to Right: 1/6, 1/4, 1/3, 1/2
โ (1 mark)
Question 16 (1 mark)
One day last year, the rate of rainfall from 6:30 am until 9:00 am was 2 millimetres per hour.
What was the total rainfall from 6:30 am until 9:00 am?
______ mm
Worked Solution
Step 1: Calculate the Time Taken
We need to find the duration from 6:30 am to 9:00 am.
- 6:30 am to 7:30 am = 1 hour
- 7:30 am to 8:30 am = 1 hour
- 8:30 am to 9:00 am = 30 minutes (half an hour)
Total time = 2 and a half hours (2.5 hours).
Step 2: Calculate the Rainfall
The rate is 2 mm per hour.
\[ \text{Rainfall} = \text{Hours} \times \text{Rate} \]
\[ 2.5 \times 2 \]
Double 2.5 is 5.
Final Answer:
5 mm
โ (1 mark)
Question 17 (2 marks)
The manager of a flower shop orders 4 boxes of red roses.
There are 50 roses in each box.
The manager makes bunches with 6 roses in each bunch.
What is the greatest number of bunches that can be made?
Worked Solution
Step 1: Calculate Total Roses
4 boxes with 50 roses in each.
\[ 4 \times 50 = 200 \text{ roses} \]
Step 2: Divide into Bunches
We need to divide the 200 roses into groups of 6.
\[ 200 \div 6 \]
How many 6s in 20? 3 remainder 2.
Carry the 2 to make 20.
How many 6s in 20? 3 remainder 2.
Answer: 33 remainder 2.
Step 3: Interpret the Result
We can make 33 full bunches.
There are 2 roses left over, but they are not enough to make another bunch of 6.
Final Answer:
33
โ (2 marks)
Question 18 (2 marks)
A cinema sells tickets at three different prices.
- \( \frac{1}{20} \) of the tickets are price A.
- \( \frac{3}{5} \) of the tickets are price B.
- The rest of the tickets are price C.
What fraction of the tickets are price C?
Worked Solution
Step 1: Make Denominators the Same
We have \( \frac{1}{20} \) and \( \frac{3}{5} \).
To add them, we need a common denominator. We can change fifths into twentieths by multiplying the top and bottom by 4.
\[ \frac{3 \times 4}{5 \times 4} = \frac{12}{20} \]
Step 2: Add Price A and Price B
\[ \text{Total (A+B)} = \frac{1}{20} + \frac{12}{20} = \frac{13}{20} \]
Step 3: Find the Remainder (Price C)
The whole is \( \frac{20}{20} \) (1 whole).
\[ \frac{20}{20} – \frac{13}{20} = \frac{7}{20} \]
Final Answer:
\( \frac{7}{20} \)
โ (2 marks)
Question 19 (1 mark)
Write the missing number to make this division correct.
\( 15,000 \div \square = 75 \)
Worked Solution
Step 1: Rearranging the Calculation
If \( 15,000 \div \text{something} = 75 \), then \( 15,000 \div 75 = \text{something} \).
We need to calculate how many 75s go into 15,000.
Step 2: Simplifying the Division
Look at the first part: 150.
\( 75 \times 2 = 150 \).
So, \( 150 \div 75 = 2 \).
Now look at the remaining zeros in 15,000. There are two zeros left.
So, \( 15,000 \div 75 = 200 \).
Step 3: Checking
\( 200 \times 75 = 15,000 \). Correct.
Final Answer:
200
โ (1 mark)
Question 20 (2 marks)
Write the two missing digits to make this long multiplication correct.
x 3 5
———-
6 0
9 7 5 0
———-
1 1 4 1 0
x 3
—————–
9 7 0 5
1 6 1 7 5 0
—————–
1 7 1 4 5 5
Worked Solution
Step 1: Finding the Multiplier Digit
Look at the second row of working: 1 6 1 7 5 0.
This row comes from multiplying the top number (\( \dots 235 \)) by the missing digit in the tens column (represented as \( \dots 0 \)).
Let’s ignore the zero at the end: \( 16175 \).
We know the top number ends in 5.
What digit \( \times 5 \) ends in 5? It could be 1, 3, 5, 7, 9.
Let’s look at the whole number. \( \dots 235 \times ? = 16175 \).
Let’s test 5.
\( 235 \times 5 = 1175 \) (Too small, missing the thousands digit).
Let’s look at the full top number. If we assume the missing top digit is roughly 3 (making it 3235), then \( 3000 \times 5 = 15000 \). This is close to 16175.
So the missing multiplier is likely 5.
Step 2: Finding the Top Digit
Now look at the first row of working: 9 7 0 5.
This is \( \text{Top Number} \times 3 \).
So, \( \square 235 \times 3 = 9705 \).
Let’s divide 9705 by 3 to find the top number.
\( 9000 \div 3 = 3000 \).
\( 705 \div 3 = 235 \).
So the top number is 3235.
The missing digit is 3.
Step 3: Verification
Top number: 3235
Multiplier: 53
\( 3235 \times 50 = 161750 \). Matches.
\( 3235 \times 3 = 9705 \). Matches.
Final Answer:
Top box: 3
Bottom box: 5
โ (2 marks)
Question 21 (2 marks)
The height of the tallest person in history is 8 feet 11 inches.
One foot = 30 centimetres
One inch = 2.5 centimetres
Use this conversion table to calculate the height of the tallest person, in centimetres.
_______ cm
Worked Solution
Step 1: Convert Feet to Centimetres
We have 8 feet.
1 foot = 30 cm.
\[ 8 \times 30 = 240 \text{ cm} \]
Step 2: Convert Inches to Centimetres
We have 11 inches.
1 inch = 2.5 cm.
We need to calculate \( 11 \times 2.5 \).
Partition 11 into 10 and 1.
\[ 10 \times 2.5 = 25 \]
\[ 1 \times 2.5 = 2.5 \]
\[ 25 + 2.5 = 27.5 \text{ cm} \]
Step 3: Total Height
\[ 240 + 27.5 = 267.5 \text{ cm} \]
Final Answer:
267.5 cm
โ (2 marks)
Question 22 (1 mark)
Here is a regular hexagon.
The area of the large shaded triangle is double the area of the small shaded triangle.
What fraction of the whole hexagon is the shaded area?
Worked Solution
Step 1: Understanding Hexagon Properties
A regular hexagon can be divided into 6 equal equilateral triangles meeting at the centre.
Let’s say the area of one of these equilateral triangles is 1 unit.
So, the total area of the hexagon is 6 units.
Step 2: Calculating Shaded Area
The large shaded triangle is exactly one of these 6 triangles.
Area = 1 unit.
The question says the large triangle is double the area of the small triangle.
This means the small triangle is half the area of the large one.
Area of small triangle = 0.5 units (or \( \frac{1}{2} \) unit).
Total Shaded Area = \( 1 + 0.5 = 1.5 \) units.
Step 3: Calculating the Fraction
Fraction = \( \frac{\text{Shaded Area}}{\text{Total Area}} \)
Fraction = \( \frac{1.5}{6} \)
To get rid of the decimal, multiply top and bottom by 2.
Fraction = \( \frac{3}{12} \)
Simplify the fraction by dividing by 3.
Fraction = \( \frac{1}{4} \)
Final Answer:
\( \frac{3}{12} \) or \( \frac{1}{4} \)
โ (1 mark)
Question 23 (2 marks)
A small box contains 650 grams of cereal.
A large box contains 20% more cereal.
One portion of cereal is 40 grams.
How many full portions are in a large box?
Worked Solution
Step 1: Calculate Mass of Large Box
The large box has 20% more than 650g.
First, find 10% of 650g.
\( 650 \div 10 = 65 \text{ g} \).
So, 20% is double that: \( 65 \times 2 = 130 \text{ g} \).
Total mass = \( 650 + 130 = 780 \text{ g} \).
Step 2: Divide by Portion Size
One portion is 40g.
We need to calculate \( 780 \div 40 \).
This is the same as \( 78 \div 4 \).
Half of 78 is 39.
Half of 39 is 19.5.
Step 3: Interpret “Full Portions”
The result is 19.5 portions.
We need “full” portions, so we ignore the 0.5.
Answer is 19.
Final Answer:
19
โ (2 marks)
Question 24 (1 mark)
1,200 pupils were asked this question:
How important is it to have a break when using a screen?
This chart shows the results.
How many pupils answered ‘Very important’?
Worked Solution
Step 1: Find the Missing Percentage
The whole pie chart represents 100%.
We know:
- Not important: 12%
- Quite important: 41%
Total known = \( 12 + 41 = 53\% \).
Missing ‘Very important’ = \( 100 – 53 = 47\% \).
Step 2: Calculate the Number of Pupils
We need to find 47% of 1,200 pupils.
47% is \( 0.47 \).
Calculation: \( 0.47 \times 1200 \).
This is the same as \( 47 \times 12 \).
\( 47 \times 10 = 470 \)
\( 47 \times 2 = 94 \)
\( 470 + 94 = 564 \)
Final Answer:
564
โ (1 mark)
Question 25 (3 marks total)
There are 25 sheets of paper in a small pack.
There are 500 sheets in a large pack.
Part A: How many small packs make one large pack?
(1 mark)
The mass of the paper in the large pack is 2.4 kilograms.
Part B: What is the mass of one sheet of paper, in grams?
g (2 marks)
Worked Solution
Part A Solution
We need to find how many 25s fit into 500.
\[ 500 \div 25 \]
There are four 25s in 100.
So in 500, there are \( 5 \times 4 = 20 \).
Answer: 20 packs.
Part B: Convert Mass to Grams
Total mass = 2.4 kg.
1 kg = 1,000 g.
\[ 2.4 \times 1000 = 2400 \text{ g} \]
Part B: Divide by Number of Sheets
There are 500 sheets in the large pack.
Total mass is 2400 g.
Mass of one sheet = \( 2400 \div 500 \).
Cancel zeros: \( 24 \div 5 \).
\( 24 \div 5 = 4.8 \)
Final Answer:
Part A: 20
Part B: 4.8 g
โ (3 marks total)
Question 26 (2 marks)
This formula is used to estimate the mass (in kilograms) of young children.
Part A: Stefanโs sister is 4 years of age.
Use the formula to estimate her mass.
kg (1 mark)
Part B: The mass of Meganโs brother is 16 kilograms.
Use the formula to estimate his age.
years (1 mark)
Worked Solution
Part A: Calculate Mass
Formula: \( \text{mass} = 2 \times (\text{age} + 5) \).
Age = 4.
First, do the brackets: \( 4 + 5 = 9 \).
Then multiply by 2: \( 2 \times 9 = 18 \).
Answer: 18 kg.
Part B: Working Backwards
We know the mass is 16 kg.
Formula: \( 16 = 2 \times (\text{age} + 5) \).
We need to find the age.
1. Undo the multiply by 2: Divide 16 by 2.
\[ 16 \div 2 = 8 \]
So, \( \text{age} + 5 = 8 \).
2. Undo the add 5: Subtract 5 from 8.
\[ 8 – 5 = 3 \]
Answer: 3 years.
Final Answer:
Part A: 18
Part B: 3
โ (2 marks)