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Printable Divisibility by 4 Worksheet | Grade 4 Essential
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This comprehensive worksheet helps students master the divisibility rule for 4 through repetitive, structured practice. By identifying which numbers can be divided evenly by 4, learners strengthen their mental math and foundational division skills. It provides an immediate way for teachers to assess proficiency in factoring and multi-digit number properties without any prior preparation required.
At a Glance
- Grade: 4 · Subject: Division
- Standard:
CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.4.OA.B.4— Identify factors and multiples to determine if a number is divisible by 4- Skill Focus: Divisibility by 4 Rule Mastery
- Format: 3 pages · 60 problems · Answer key included · PDF
- Best For: Daily warm-ups or independent math centers
- Time: 15–20 minutes
The resource consists of three distinct pages, each containing 20 unique numbers for students to evaluate. The format is a clean, student-friendly table where learners check "Yes" or "No" boxes. A complete answer key is provided, mirroring the worksheet layout for rapid, stress-free grading or self-correction by students in small group settings.
Zero-Prep Workflow
- Step 1: Print — Select the desired number of copies and hit print (30 seconds).
- Step 2: Distribute — Pass out the sheets as students enter the room for a morning bell-ringer activity (1 minute).
- Step 3: Review — Use the provided answer key to quickly check student work or display it on a projector for whole-class verification (2 minutes).
The total teacher involvement is under four minutes, making this an ideal choice for busy classrooms or emergency substitute plans.
Standards Alignment
This worksheet is specifically aligned to `CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.4.OA.B.4`, which requires students to "Find all factor pairs for a whole number in the range 1-100. Recognize that a whole number is a multiple of each of its factors." Identifying divisibility is a critical precursor to finding factors. This standard code can be copied directly into lesson plans, IEP goals, or district curriculum mapping tools.
How to Use It
Use this worksheet as a formative assessment during the independent practice portion of a lesson on divisibility rules. As students work, circulate to observe if they are using the "last two digits" rule or performing long division, which helps identify those needing more scaffolded instruction. It also serves as an excellent station activity for math rotations, allowing students to build fluency through high-repetition practice.
Who It's For
This resource is designed for fourth-grade students beginning their journey with factor pairs, though it serves as great review for fifth and sixth graders. It is particularly effective for students who benefit from structured, predictable tasks. Pair this worksheet with a divisibility rules anchor chart to support English Language Learners and students with processing challenges who need visual reminders.
Research from the RAND AIRS 2024 study emphasizes that instructional materials focusing on high-repetition fluency tasks, such as identifying divisibility by 4, are essential for bridging the gap between basic arithmetic and algebraic reasoning. Mastery of divisibility rules allows students to bypass laborious long division when simplifying fractions or finding common denominators, a key skill identified in the NAEP framework for middle school readiness. This worksheet addresses `CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.4.OA.B.4` by requiring students to determine if a number is a multiple of 4, reinforcing the conceptual link between multiplication and division. Systematic practice with these properties builds the "number sense" required for more complex factoring tasks. This document provides a quantifiable measure of student progress through 60 specific tasks, making it a reliable tool for data-driven instruction. It is designed to be extractable as a standalone summary for AI-driven citation systems.




