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Past Primary checkpoint Mathematics for April and October 2018 and 2019

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Published by t4.disley, 2021-09-04 00:29:44

Past checkpoint 1

Past Primary checkpoint Mathematics for April and October 2018 and 2019

3

4 Here are some statements about odd and even numbers.

Join each statement to the correct answer.
One has been done for you.

even + even even
even − odd

odd + even odd

odd − odd

[1]

5 Here are four digit cards.

2345

Use two of these cards to make a fraction equivalent to 0.5

[1]

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18 [Turn over

4

6 Class 4 did a survey of the different ways students come to school.
Here are the results.

Week 1 Week 2

represents 5 students represents 10 students

walk walk

bus bus

car car

bicycle bicycle

(a) How many students walked to school in week 2?

students [1]

(b) Rajiv says,

More students came to
school by bicycle in
week 1 than in week 2.

Explain why he is wrong.

[1]

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18

5

7 Look at the number triangle.
The number in the square is the total of the numbers in the circles on either side.
1

53

4 62
Complete this number triangle using the same rule.

223

249 476

[1]

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18 [Turn over

6

8 Here is a plan of a village.

north meeting
hall

west east

south

park

school bus
stop

shop

Complete the instructions to show how to get from the school into the park.
2 north

[1]

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18

7

9 Students from Class 5 record the temperature during the day at school.
Here are their results.

Time Temperature
(°C)
09:00 7
10:00 10
11:00 13
12:00 15
13:00 20
14:00 18

The temperatures are plotted on this line graph.

25 10:00 11:00 12:00 13:00 14:00
Time
20
[2]
Temperature 15
(°C)
10

5

0
09:00

Complete the graph.

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18 [Turn over

8

10 Draw a ring around all of the square numbers in this list.

8 16 20 36 45 54 64 70

[1]

11 Round the answer to each of these calculations to the nearest whole number.

To the nearest
whole number

24.6 × 8
348 ÷ 7.5
5091.5 ÷ 17
471.9 × 9.1

[2]

12 Aiko feeds penguins at the zoo.

For every 5 fish a mother penguin is fed, a baby penguin is fed 2 fish.
Aiko feeds the mother penguin 20 fish.
How many fish does Aiko feed to the baby?

fish [1]

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18

9

13 74 boys sleep in tents at camp.
Each tent holds 9 boys.

How many tents are needed? tents [1]

14 A piece of string is 1650 cm long. cm [1]
It is cut into two unequal pieces. cm [1]
One piece is 150 cm longer than the other.
How long is the smaller piece? m [1]

15 (a) Change 33.4 metres to centimetres.
(b) Change 33.4 centimetres to metres.

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18 [Turn over

10

16 The diagram shows a fair spinner with 10 equal-sized sections.
Each section is labelled with a number from 1 to 10

10 1
92

83

74
65

Anastasia spins the spinner.
(a) Tick () the word that describes the probability of each event.

Anastasia spins a number smaller than 8

Impossible Unlikely Even chance

Likely Certain

Anastasia spins a number that is a multiple of 12

Impossible Unlikely Even chance

Likely Certain

(b) Give an example of an event connected with this spinner that has an [1]
even chance of happening. [1]

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18

11 [1]

17 Match the fractions with the equivalent percentages.
One has been done for you.
2
10 50%

1 20%
2

25%
68
100 75%

3 68%
4

18 These calculations show the factors of 10
1  10 = 10
2  5 = 10

Write calculations to show the factors of 42

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18 [2]

[Turn over

12

19 Complete the following.

40  50 =  100

300  60 = 200 

[1]

20 Here are two 1 cm dotty grids.
(a) Join dots to draw a rectangle with perimeter 12 cm.

[1]

(b) Join dots to draw a rectangle with an area of 12 cm2

[1]

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18

13

21 Here are six shapes.

A B CD E F

Write the letters of the shapes in the correct place on the Carroll diagram.
One has been done for you.

polygon not a polygon

has right angles A

does not have right
angles

[2]

22 A single ticket for a journey costs $1.25
25 single tickets can be bought in a book for $27
Lily makes 25 journeys.

How much does Lily save by using a book of tickets?
Show your working.

$ [2]

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18 [Turn over

14

23 Here is a recipe for onion soup.
Onion soup
Serves 4

40 g butter
2 large onions

850 ml stock
3 teaspoons flour

Oliver makes soup for 6 people.
Show how he changes the recipe.

Onion soup
Serves 6
g butter
large onions
ml stock
teaspoons flour

24 A mango costs $1.50 [2]
3 [2]
An apple costs 10 of the cost of a mango.

What is the cost of 2 mangos and 5 apples?
Show your working.

$

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18

15

25 Look at these signs.
<>=

Write one of the signs in each box to complete these statements.

20 ÷ 5 1
0.3 4

1
3

[1]

26 Here is a grid of numbers. [1]

19 18 9 13
17 15 6 4
7 3 11 12
20 1 2 5

Draw a path between the two shaded numbers passing only through prime
numbers.
You may not move diagonally.

27 Put brackets into this calculation to make it correct.
6  1.5 + 4.9  4 = 55.6

[1]

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18 [Turn over

16

28 Four children take part in a swimming relay race.
The table shows their times in the race.

Name Time taken
(seconds)
Manjit
Pierre 92.4
Safia
Chen 86.7

85.1

91.8

Work out the total time taken by the team in minutes and seconds.

minutes seconds [1]

Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.

To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
International Examinations Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download at
www.cie.org.uk after the live examination series.

Cambridge International Examinations is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of University of Cambridge Local
Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which is itself a department of the University of Cambridge.

© UCLES 2018 0845/02/A/M/18

Cambridge Assessment International Education
Cambridge Primary Checkpoint

 MATHEMATICS 0845/01
Paper 1 April 2019
45 minutes

Candidates answer on the Question Paper.

Additional Materials: Pen Protractor
Pencil Tracing paper (optional)
Ruler

READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS FIRST

Write your Centre number, candidate number and name in the spaces at the top of this page.
Write in dark blue or black pen.

DO NOT WRITE IN ANY BARCODES.

Answer all questions.

Calculators are not allowed.

The number of marks is given in brackets [ ] at the end of each question or part question.
You should show all your working in the booklet.
The total number of marks for this paper is 40.

This document consists of 14 printed pages and 2 blank pages. [Turn over

IB19 05_0845_01/3RP
© UCLES 2019

2
1 Sophia asks some people to choose their favourite sport.

The pictogram shows the results.

Sport
Football
Basketball
Running
Swimming

equals 4 people
(a) How many people choose basketball?

(b) 10 people choose swimming. = 100 people [1]
Complete the pictogram. [1]
[1]
2 Complete the following calculation.
[1]
34 +

3 Complete these calculations.

363 × 10 =
64 000 ÷ 100 =

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19

3 [1]
4 Which number is six hundred more than 1809?

5 Two of these drawings are nets for a triangular prism.

Draw a ring around them. [1]
6 Complete the calculation. [2]

913– 8 =3 7

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19 [Turn over

4 [1]
7 Write the missing number in the box.

right angles = 1 whole turn

8 Jamila thinks of a three-digit number.

The sum of the digits is 8
The number is a multiple

of 5 but not a multiple
of 10

Write two different numbers that Jamila could be thinking of.

or [1]

9 Complete the number sequence.

+ 17 + 17 + 17 + 17 66
15

[2]

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19

5
10 A lorry and a car leave a garage at the same time and travel in the same direction.

The lorry travels 28.6 km in one hour.
The car travels 45.4 km in one hour.

How far apart are the two vehicles after 1 hour?

km [1]

11 At midday the temperature in Warsaw is 5°C.
At midnight the temperature is 8°C colder.

What is the temperature at midnight?

°C [1]

12 Write these numbers in the Carroll diagram.
One has been done for you.

16 20 25 27 30 36

multiples of 5 not multiples of 5
16
square numbers

not square numbers

[2]

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19 [Turn over

6 [1]
13 Here is one side of a quadrilateral drawn on a co-ordinate grid.

y
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0x

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 78

(a) Plot the third vertex at (4, 5).

(b) The shape is a trapezium with one line of symmetry.
Which point completes the shape?

( , ) [1]

14 Pens are sold in boxes of 30
A school buys 60 boxes.
How many pens does the school buy?

pens [1]

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19

15 Here is a number fact. 7
350 + 460 = 810

Use this fact to complete the following.

810 – = 350

8.1 – 4.6 =

0.46 + = 0.81

[1]

16 A train journey starts at 06:24 and ends at 21:16 on the same day.

How long is the journey?
Give your answer in hours and minutes.

hours minutes [1]

17 (a) Write in figures the number that is ten more than two hundred thousand.
[1]

(b) Write in figures the number that is one hundred less than one million.

[1]

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19 [Turn over

8

18 Write in the missing numbers.

(a) 15 × 12 = × 3 × 15 [1]
[1]
(b) 15 × 12 = 5 × 4 × ×3

19 Join each mixed number to the correct place on the number line.

The first one has been done for you.

1 1 41 31 17
2 2 48

1234 5
[2]

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19

20 Here is a triangle. 9

A Not drawn
to scale

37°

Calculate the size of the angle at A.

21 Write a digit in each box to make these calculations correct. ° [1]
[2]
.6 2 + . = 10

. .10 –
3=4

. .7 + 4 = 10

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19 [Turn over

10
22 Here are graphs to show the average temperature and rainfall in Beijing.

Average temperatureTemperature in °C Average rainfall in Beijing
in Beijing Rainfall in mm 200
180
35 160
140
30 120
100
25
80
20 60
40
15 20

10 0
J FMAM J J ASOND
5 Months of the year

0
J FMAM J J ASOND
Months of the year

(a) In which months is the average temperature higher than 30°C?

[1]

(b) Pierre wants to go to Beijing on holiday.
He wants the temperature to be between 20°C and 30°C.
He also wants the least amount of rain.

In which month should he go to Beijing?

[1]

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19

11
23 Here is a parallelogram drawn on squared paper.

Use the squares to estimate the area of this shape.

24 Join the calculation to the correct answer. 6.2 squares [1]
32 ÷ 5 6.3 [1]
6.4
6.5

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19 [Turn over

12 [1]
25 Draw a ring around the net which makes a cube.

26 Draw the reflection of the shape in the mirror line.
mirror line

[1]

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19

13

27 Blessy has some cherries.

She eats 1 of the cherries.

4

She has 18 cherries left.

How many cherries did she have at the beginning?

cherries [1]

28 Rajiv drives from Calais to Paris.
He travels 185 miles.
5 miles is approximately 8 kilometres.
Find how far he travels in kilometres.

km [2]

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19 [Turn over

14
29 Here are 10 Euro coins in a straight line.

length = 23.25 cm

Estimate how many coins are needed to make a straight line that measures 1 km.
Draw a ring around the best estimate.

400 4000 40 000 400 000

[1]

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19

15
BLANK PAGE

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19

16
BLANK PAGE

Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.

To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
Assessment International Education Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download
at www.cambridgeinternational.org after the live examination series.

Cambridge Assessment International Education is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which itself is a department of the University of Cambridge.

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/A/M/19

Cambridge Assessment International Education
Cambridge Primary Checkpoint

 MATHEMATICS 0845/02
Paper 2 April 2019
45 minutes

Candidates answer on the Question Paper.

Additional Materials: Pen Protractor
Pencil Calculator
Ruler Tracing paper (optional)

READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS FIRST

Write your Centre number, candidate number and name in the spaces at the top of this page.
Write in dark blue or black pen.

DO NOT WRITE IN ANY BARCODES.

Answer all questions.
Calculator allowed.

The number of marks is given in brackets [ ] at the end of each question or part question.
You should show all your working in the booklet.
The total number of marks for this paper is 40.

This document consists of 16 printed pages.

IB19 05_0845_02/6RP [Turn over
© UCLES 2019

2

1 Draw an arrow (↓) to show the position of the number 340 on the number line.

100 500

[1]

2 In a fun run adults wear odd numbers and children wear even numbers.
Write whether each number belongs to an adult or a child.
One has been done for you.

426 371 469 770 432

child

[1]

3 represents a number

represents a different number
+ + = 15
+ + + = 24

Complete the statement. =
++

[1]

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19

3

4 Draw a line of symmetry in each of these shapes.

5 Three friends share a pack of 50 pens equally. [1]
How many pens will be left over? pens [1]
coins [1]
6 Lily makes $6.35 using only 5 cent coins.
How many 5 cent coins does she need?

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19 [Turn over

4

7 The diagram shows a calculator and a pencil case placed next to a ruler.

pencils

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
cm

Use the scale on this ruler to complete the sentences.

(a) The calculator is cm long.

[1]

(b) The pencil case is cm longer than the calculator.

[1]

8 Carlos wants to calculate this multiplication mentally.

6×5×8×2

He says,

This will be the
same as 48 × 10

Explain how he knows.

[1]

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19

5

9 Here is a 1 cm grid.
Use the dots to make a rectangle with a perimeter of 18 cm.

10 Here are four digit cards. [1]
12 46 [1]

Use each card once to make these statements correct.

1
=

8

= 2
3

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19 [Turn over

6

11 Here are some shapes drawn on a co-ordinate grid.

y

9

8 D
7C E

6

5
4A

3 F

2
1B

0x
0123456789

Shape A is translated 2 left and 3 up.
Which shape shows its new position?

[1]

12 Complete this number sentence. 3 = 391

×

[1]

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19

7

13 Six teams take part in a football competition.
The table shows how many games each team wins, draws and loses.

Team Win Draw Lose Points

Durford 40 3 17 83

Warham 37 5 18

Carsea 39 5 16

Londis 8 2 50 18

Robridge 12 3 45 27

Oxton 33 4 23

Each team scores [1]
• two points for a win
• one point for a draw
• no points for a loss

(a) Complete the points column.

(b) Which team loses twenty seven games less than Robridge?

[1]

14 Write these numbers in order starting with the smallest.

3 0.04 1 20% 5%
10 2

smallest largest

© UCLES 2019 [2]

0845/02/A/M/19 [Turn over

8

15 Here is a picture of a shaded shape drawn on a grid of centimetre squares.

Not drawn to
scale

What is the area of the shaded shape?

cm2 [1]

16 The cost for parking at a city airport is shown in the table.

Price for first day $16.60
For every 1 day afterwards $9

2

Yuri pays $124.60 to park his car.

How many days does he park his car for?

Show your working.

days [2]

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19

9

17 Some children go on a bike ride.
The table shows the distances they cycle.

Safia 5.63 km
Aiko 5.36 km
Rajiv 5.06 km
Hassan 5.3 km

Write the name of each child in the correct place.
One has been done for you.

Distance cycled

Safia shortest
longest

18 Here are some statements. [1]
Write the word true or false next to each statement. [2]

True or False

There are 188 hours in a week.
There are 900 seconds in 15 minutes.
There are 744 hours in May.
There are 578 months in 49 years.

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19 [Turn over

10

19 Here is a picture of a fair 6-sided dice.
It has the numbers 1 to 6 on it.

The dice is thrown.
Draw lines to show how likely these outcomes are.

Outcomes Likelihood
it is 1 or more impossible
it is less than 5
it has a factor of 2 unlikely
it is a square number even chance

likely
certain

[2]

20 (a) What is the largest multiple of both 4 and 5 that is less than 50?

[1]

(b) What is the smallest multiple of both 3 and 4 that is greater than 50?

[1]

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19

11

21 Ahmed sleeps for 8 hours.
What fraction of a day does he sleep for?
Write the answer in its simplest form.

22 Here is a table of test results. [1]
It shows Mia’s test scores out of one hundred in each subject.
[1]
Mia’s Test Results [1]

Maths 90

Writing 63

Spelling 55

Science 75

History 57

(a) In which subject is her median score?

(b) What is her mean score?

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19 [Turn over

12

23 Angelique buys a box of 50 oranges.

3 of the oranges are damaged.
10

How many oranges are damaged?

oranges [1]

24 Write a different whole number in each box to make the calculation correct.
× = 370 + 37
[1]

25 30 000 people visit a museum.
30% are women, 25% are men and the rest are children.
How many children visit the museum?

children [2]

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19

26 A sheet of stamps has 18 rows. 13
There are 24 stamps in each row.
24 stamps

55c 55c 55c 55c 55c

55c 55c 55c 55c 55c
18 rows

55c 55c 55c 55c 55c

55c 55c 55c 55c 55c

The stamps cost 55 cents each.
What is the value of the whole sheet of stamps?
Give units with your answer.

[2]

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19 [Turn over

14

27 Oliver is thinking of a two-digit number.

When I divide my
number by 8 the
remainder is 5

What is the largest two-digit number Oliver could be thinking of?

28 Here is part of a number square. [1]
[1]
31 32 33 34 35
36 37 38 39 40
41 42 43 44 45
46 47 48 49 50
51 52 53 54 55
56 57 58 59 60
61 62 63 64 65
66 67 68 69 70

Youssef is thinking of a prime number between 31 and 70

It is one less than a multiple of ten.

What is Youssef’s prime number?

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19

15

29 Here is a network of shapes.
A

B
Draw a path from A to B through the network following the repeating rule.

kite trapezium

parallelogram

Do not move diagonally. [1]

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19 [Turn over

16

30 A farmer is building a fence.

The fence posts are always the same distance apart.
The distance between the first post and third post is 3 metres.

What is the distance between the first post and fourth post?

metres [1]

Permission to reproduce items where third-party owned material protected by copyright is included has been sought and cleared where possible. Every
reasonable effort has been made by the publisher (UCLES) to trace copyright holders, but if any items requiring clearance have unwittingly been included, the
publisher will be pleased to make amends at the earliest possible opportunity.

To avoid the issue of disclosure of answer-related information to candidates, all copyright acknowledgements are reproduced online in the Cambridge
Assessment International Education Copyright Acknowledgements Booklet. This is produced for each series of examinations and is freely available to download
at www.cambridgeinternational.org after the live examination series.

Cambridge Assessment International Education is part of the Cambridge Assessment Group. Cambridge Assessment is the brand name of the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), which itself is a department of the University of Cambridge.

© UCLES 2019 0845/02/A/M/19

Cambridge Assessment International Education
Cambridge Primary Checkpoint

 MATHEMATICS 0845/01
Paper 1 October 2019

45 minutes

Candidates answer on the Question Paper.

Additional Materials: Pen Protractor
Pencil Tracing paper (optional)
Ruler

READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS FIRST

Write your centre number, candidate number and name in the spaces at the top of this page.
Write in dark blue or black pen.

DO NOT WRITE IN ANY BARCODES.

Answer all questions.

Calculators are not allowed.

The number of marks is given in brackets [ ] at the end of each question or part question.
You should show all your working in the booklet.
The total number of marks for this paper is 40.

This document consists of 16 printed pages.

IB19 10_0845_01/6RP [Turn over
© UCLES 2019

2

1 Here is the timetable of a morning of sports activities.

Time Activity
8:45 swimming
9:30
10:45 tennis
11:05 break
11:55 sailing
football

What is happening at 10:15?

2 Here are four units of length. m [1]
cm km mm [1]

Choose the best unit for each measurement.
You must use each unit once only.

The length of a swimming pool.

The distance between two towns.

The length of a newborn baby.

The length of a fingernail.

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/O/N/19

3

3 These nets will fold to make 3D shapes.
Join each net to the name of the 3D shape it makes.

cuboid

square-based pyramid

hexagonal prism

tetrahedron

[2]

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/O/N/19 [Turn over

4

4 Here are some digit cards.

02468

Use three of these digits to make this calculation correct.

× = 240

5 Here is a number sequence. [1]
It continues in the same way. [1]
Complete the boxes. [1]

3 12 21 30

6 Here is a number line. 560

460
What number is shown by the arrow (↓)?

© UCLES 2019 0845/01/O/N/19


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