This easy worksheet pairs division word tracing with simple equal-groups facts so first graders connect the language of sharing to the math. Students trace group, share, split, half, equal, and divide, then fill in answers like 10 divided by 2 = 5, 6 divided by 3 = 2, 8 divided by 2 = 4, and 4 divided by 4 = 1. A short true-or-false section asks children to judge claims such as 10 divided by 5 equals 2 and 9 toys in 3 equal groups means each group has 2, gently exposing the common error of mixing divisor and quotient.
It builds on Easy-3 by reusing key vocabulary while introducing the divide-by-itself pattern that always gives 1.
Style:
Division Basic Facts
Part A: Trace the Words
Trace each word carefully by following the dotted lines.
1. group
2. share
3. split
4. half
5. equal
6. divide
Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1. 10 divided by 2 = 5
2. 6 divided by 3 = 2
3. 8 divided by 2 = 4
4. 4 divided by 4 = 1
Part C: True or False?
Read each statement. Circle True or False.
1. 10 divided by 5 equals 2.
True False
2. 9 toys in 3 equal groups means each group has 2.
True False
3. 6 divided by 2 equals 3.
True False
Division Basic Facts
★ Part A: Trace the Words
Trace each word carefully by following the dotted lines.
1) group
2) share
3) split
4) half
5) equal
6) divide
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) 10 divided by 2 = 5
2) 6 divided by 3 = 2
3) 8 divided by 2 = 4
4) 4 divided by 4 = 1
★ Part C: True or False?
Read each statement. Circle True or False.
1) 10 divided by 5 equals 2.
True
False
2) 9 toys in 3 equal groups means each group has 2.
True
False
3) 6 divided by 2 equals 3.
True
False
Ready to Practice?
Complete each section carefully.
13 Questions
15-20 minutes
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