MainContent
p-top: 48 p-bot: 48 p-left: 32 p-right: 32 p-x: 32 m-bot: 24

This hard worksheet challenges first graders to reason about multiplication, not just compute. Part A presents four multiple-choice questions involving equal groups and equivalent expressions, such as a story about boxes of crayons and recognizing that 4 groups of 3 equals 12. Part B introduces five missing-factor puzzles like ___ x 4 = 20 and 3 x ___ = 9, asking students to think backward from the product to the unknown factor.

Style:
Busy Bee
Multiplication Facts 0–5
Grade 1
★ Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the correct answer for each question.
1. There are 3 boxes with 5 crayons in each box. How many crayons are there in all?
 A) 8
 B) 10
 C) 15
 D) 20
2. Which expression equals 16?
 A) 3 x 5
 B) 4 x 4
 C) 2 x 5
 D) 5 x 5
3. 4 groups of 3 is the same as ___.
 A) 4 + 3
 B) 4 x 3
 C) 3 + 3
 D) 4 x 4
4. An array has 5 rows and 2 columns. How many squares are there?
 A) 7
 B) 8
 C) 10
 D) 12
★ Part B: Fill in the Missing Number
Write the missing number to complete each number sentence.
1) 5 x 4 = 20
2) 3 x 3 = 9
3) 4 x 2 = 8
4) 5 x 5 = 25
5) 2 x 3 = 6
🎯

Ready to Practice?

For Part A, circle the correct answer. For Part B, write the missing number on the line.

9 Questions
20-25 minutes
Auto-graded
Retry anytime
🏆
Questions Correct
0
Correct
0
Incorrect
0
Skipped
0:00
Time
0%
Score
Great work!

Review Your Answers

See what you got right, missed, or skipped.