0% found this document useful (0 votes)
470 views17 pages

Grade 5

1. The document is a mock test paper for Primary 5 students with 25 multiple choice and open-ended questions across 3 sections worth a total of 100 points. 2. The test covers topics in mathematics including arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and problem solving. 3. Students have 1 hour and 30 minutes to complete the test and show their work. Calculators are not allowed.

Uploaded by

Cht Geby
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
470 views17 pages

Grade 5

1. The document is a mock test paper for Primary 5 students with 25 multiple choice and open-ended questions across 3 sections worth a total of 100 points. 2. The test covers topics in mathematics including arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and problem solving. 3. Students have 1 hour and 30 minutes to complete the test and show their work. Calculators are not allowed.

Uploaded by

Cht Geby
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 17

PRIMARY 5 (GRADE 05) MOCK TEST PAPER SET 1

NAME: Index Number:

SCHOOL:

INSTRUCTIONS:
1. Please DO NOT OPEN the contest booklet until the Proctor has given permission to
start
2. TIME: 1 hour 30 minutes.
3. There are 25 questions with 100 total points:
Section A: Questions 1 to 15 score 3 points each, no points are deducted for an
unanswered or wrong answer.
Section B: Questions 16 to 20 score 5 points each, no points are deducted for an
unanswered or wrong answer.
Section C: Questions 21 to 25 score 6 points each, no points are deducted for an unanswered
or wrong answer.
4. Shade your answers neatly using a 2B lead pencil in the Answer Entry Sheet.
5. PROCTORING: No one may help any student in any way during the contest.
6. No electronic devices capable of storing and displaying visual information are allowed
during the course of the exam. Strictly No Calculators are allowed.
7. All students must fill and shade their Name, School and Index Number in the
Answer Entry Sheet and Contest booklet.
8. MINIMUM TIME: Students must stay in the exam hall for at least 1 hour.
9. A student must show detailed working and transfer answers to the Answer Entry
Sheet.
10. No exam papers and written notes can be taken out by any contestant.

0
ROUGH WORKING

1
SECTION A: 15 Multiple Choice Questions
3 points each

Question 1
Brenda multiplies a number by 3, adds 3, divides by 3, adds 6, subtracts 3 from the
result to get 9. What is six times of the original number?
A. 5
B. 3
C. 30
D. 54
E. 126

Question 2
2021 is the sum of at least how many positive two-digit numbers?
A. 20
B. 21
C. 202
D. 203
E. 1011

2
Question 3
Which of the following is true?
A. If a circle and a regular octagon have the same area, the length of the radius
of the circle will be equal to the distance between the centre of any vertex of
the octagon.
B. The difference between the number of sides of an octagon and a trapezium is
a prime number.
C. All regular quadrilaterals have sides of equal length.
D. Four more than the sides of a decagon is the same value as the total number
of sides of two heptagons stuck to each other.
E. The area of only right triangles is given by (𝑏 × ℎ) ÷ 2

Question 4
Natural numbers are also called counting numbers and they are positive integers
starting from 1. For example, 1, 2, 3, 4, … are natural numbers. The average of the
sum of the first 4 natural numbers and the first 5 even numbers is:
A. 10
B. 20
C. 30
D. 40
E. 4.5

3
Question 5
One-fifth of all apples in a crate is rotten. Three-fourths are ordinary. The remaining
are considered excellent. If there were 200 apples in a crate, how many excellent
apples did it have?
A. 10
B. 40
C. 160
D. 190

Question 6
Amanda’s score was twice Brian’s score. Cassie scored 5 points less than Brian.
Dora scored 10 points more than Amanda. Dora’s score was 6 times as much as
Cassie’s. Whose score was 10?
A. Amanda
B. Brian
C. Cassie
D. Dora

4
Question 7

The largest natural number formed by the digits 4, 5, 0, 3 and the smallest number
formed by using all of those digits exactly once, are subtracted. Assume that a valid
number does not start with 0 unless it is 0 itself (which we shall consider to be a 1-
digit number.) What is the number formed by the first two digits of the result?

A. 23
B. 85
C. 50
D. 57

Question 8
Observe the two shapes. Find the total volume of the shapes, if all have equal unit
sides of 3 cm. Assume it is a packed figure where the invisible areas also are packed
with cubes of similar sizes and that the figures fit flush into the corner of the
rectangular walls of a room.

A. 12 cm3
B. 27 cm3
C. 567 cm3
D. 81 cm3
E. 48 cm3

5
Question 9
What is the size of the problem space (i.e. if you count all the possible values, how
many such values are there) of the following experiment: “Guessing a 4 digit ATM
pin”. (Assume that each digit of the pin can have values from 0—9)

A. 10,000
B. 256
C. 40
D. 6561
E. 10

Question 10
Dr. Hazma, Dr. Tan and Dr. Gupta created vaccines in their labs. Dr. Hazma’s
vaccine showed 98% effectiveness. Dr. Tan’s was 92% effective. Dr. Gupta’s was
93% effective. What was the probability that all three were simultaneously effective?
Assume they are independent trials.
A. Not possible
B. 83.85%
C. 16.15%
D. 12%
E. Not possible to determine

6
Question 11
Three pentagons are stuck together as shown below. All sides are equal and
measure 3 cm. What is the difference between the total perimeter of the three
individual pentagons and the final figure?

A. 12 cm
B. 6 cm
C. 45 cm
D. 33 cm

Question 12
What is the 2021st number in the sequence below?

7, 9, 11, 13, …

A. 2028
B. 4041
C. 4047
D. 4050
E. 4042

7
Question 13
Which of the following numbers has an odd number of even prime factors?

A. 182
B. 442
C. 128
D. 100
E. 400

Question 14
Azma took part in a gymnastics competition where many people participated. When
the rank list arrived, it turned out that no one was disqualified. She was the 3rd place
ahead of the first of the lower half of the contestants. She was 3rd place behind the
bronze medalist. The first prize is a gold medal, the second prize is a silver medal
and the third prize is a bronze medal. How many people competed in all?

A. 12
B. 13
C. 15
D. 16
E. 17

8
Question 15
A number 𝑝 is 1.5 times another number 𝑞. If 𝑝 is 18 bigger than 𝑞, then what is
𝑝 + 𝑞?

A. 18
B. 36
C. 54
D. 108
E. None of the above

Solution
2𝑝 = 3𝑞
𝑝 = 18 + 𝑞
2(18 + 𝑞) = 3𝑞 => 36 = 𝑞 and 54 = 𝑝 => 𝑝 + 𝑞 = 90

9
Section B: 5 Open-Ended Questions
5 points each

Question 16
A dancer is allowed to step only on one of the following tiles. One is coloured blue, 1
is coloured green, 2 are coloured red, 2 are coloured orange, and 3 are coloured
grey. The grey ones are sticky and they cause the dancer to stop dancing. If the
𝑚
chance that the dancer will get stuck on the first step itself is 𝑛 , find 𝑚 + 𝑛.

Question 17
Five natural numbers are chosen from 1 to 45. These add up to 45. If we call the
biggest of these five numbers ‘𝐵’, what is the largest possible value of 𝐵 across all
such sets of five numbers?

10
Question 18
Raziya started with the following structure. It is a fully packed box all the way to the
back of the top stairs. She added similar unit cubes to build it up to a packed
staircase. She has unit cubes that fill a box 3 × 11 × 10 cm3 in dimensions. (A unit
cube is 1 cm × 1 cm × 1 cm in size.). The final staircase she made was 10 steps
high. What was the length (width) of each step in her structure?

Question 19
In the weighing scale below, the rectangle weighs 2 kg more than the triangle. The
oval weighs 3 kg less than the triangle. What is the weight of the rectangle, in kg?

11
Question 20
A five-digit number is formed such that it satisfies the following conditions:
• It is a multiple of 3 and 5.
• The third digit is half of the first digit and one less than the second digit.
• The sum of the first three digits is 13 and the sum of the last three digits is 8.
• The fourth digit is the second-largest digit of that number.

Find the sum of digits of that number.

12
Section C: 5 Open-Ended Questions
6 points each

Question 21
Find the perimeter of each small rectangle within (assume they are all the same
dimensions), given that the total area of the shape shown is 60 cm2.

Question 22
A train travelling at 54 km/h passes a platform. A man is standing on the platform,
and he sees the train pass him in 20 seconds. Find the length of the train, in meters.

13
Question 23
How many ways can we go from the dark square at the top to the dark square at
the bottom of the grid moving only right or down and only along the grid lines? No
backtracking is allowed. No moving through the same section more than once.

Question 24
A 4-digit number in the form 𝑎𝑎𝑏𝑏 is a perfect square. What is the square root of
𝑎𝑎𝑏𝑏?

14
Question 25
Read this sentence carefully: “If you take the GCD (or HCF) of two numbers, you are
left with numbers that are co-prime.”. For example, if the numbers are 50 and 70,
their underlying co-primes are 5 and 7. You get that by dividing both the numbers
by their GCD, which is 10.

Now read the following problem and use the above sentence to solve it. Two
numbers add to 1085. Their GCD is 35. What is the average of the underlying co-
prime numbers, rounded off to the nearest whole number?

15
ANSWER KEY

QUESTION 1 C QUESTION 14 D

QUESTION 2 B QUESTION 15 E

QUESTION 3 C QUESTION 16 0004

QUESTION 4 B QUESTION 17 0035

QUESTION 5 A QUESTION 18 0006

QUESTION 6 B QUESTION 19 0009

QUESTION 7 A QUESTION 20 0018

QUESTION 8 C QUESTION 21 0016

QUESTION 9 A QUESTION 22 0300

QUESTION 10 B QUESTION 23 0006

QUESTION 11 A QUESTION 24 0088

QUESTION 12 C QUESTION 25 0016

QUESTION 13 C

16

You might also like