Basic Math

Mixed operations | Fourth Grade

Mixed Operations | Fourth Grade

Complete Notes & Formulas

1. Add, Subtract, Multiply and Divide

Definition: Using all four basic operations together in mathematical expressions and following the correct order.

📐 Order of Operations (PEMDAS/BODMAS):

  1. P - Parentheses/Brackets ( ): Do operations inside parentheses first
  2. E - Exponents/Orders: Powers and roots (not common in 4th grade)
  3. MD - Multiplication and Division: Left to right
  4. AS - Addition and Subtraction: Left to right

✏️ Example:

Solve: 5 + (3 × 4) ÷ 2

Step 1: Parentheses first → 3 × 4 = 12

Expression becomes: 5 + 12 ÷ 2

Step 2: Division → 12 ÷ 2 = 6

Expression becomes: 5 + 6

Step 3: Addition → 5 + 6 = 11

💡 Remember:

Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally (PEMDAS)
Brackets, Orders, Division, Multiplication, Addition, Subtraction (BODMAS)

2. Mixed Operations Word Problems

Definition: Word problems requiring the use of multiple operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division) to find the solution.

📝 Steps to Solve Mixed Operation Problems:

  1. Read the problem carefully and identify what you need to find
  2. Identify all given numbers and what they represent
  3. Look for keywords to determine operations needed
  4. Decide the order of operations
  5. Solve step by step
  6. Check if answer makes sense

✏️ Example:

Problem: Sarah bought 3 packs of pencils with 8 pencils in each pack. She gave 12 pencils to her friend. How many pencils does she have left?

Solution:

Step 1: Find total pencils → 3 × 8 = 24 pencils

Step 2: Subtract given away → 24 - 12 = 12 pencils

Answer: 12 pencils left

3. Estimate Sums, Differences, Products & Quotients

Definition: Finding approximate answers for problems involving multiple operations by rounding first.

📝 Estimation Strategy:

  1. Round each number to nearest 10, 100, or 1000
  2. Perform operations with rounded numbers
  3. Follow order of operations with estimates
  4. Use ≈ (approximately equals) symbol

✏️ Example:

Problem: Estimate (48 × 9) + 127

Round: 48 ≈ 50, 9 stays 9, 127 ≈ 130

Estimate: (50 × 9) + 130

= 450 + 130

≈ 580

4. Multi-Step Word Problems

Definition: Problems requiring two or more operations to reach the final answer.

📋 Problem-Solving Steps:

  1. Step 1: Read the entire problem carefully
  2. Step 2: Identify what the question is asking
  3. Step 3: Break the problem into smaller steps
  4. Step 4: Solve each step in order
  5. Step 5: Write the final answer with units

✏️ Example:

Problem: A bakery made 156 cookies. They packed them into boxes of 12. They sold 8 boxes. How many cookies are left?

Solution:

Step 1: Find cookies sold → 8 × 12 = 96 cookies

Step 2: Subtract from total → 156 - 96 = 60 cookies

Answer: 60 cookies left

5. Word Problems with Extra or Missing Information

Definition: Problems that include unnecessary information or lack essential information needed to solve.

📝 Two Types:

Type A: Extra Information

Strategy: Cross out information not needed to answer the question

Example: "Tom has 5 red marbles and 3 blue marbles. He bought 4 more red marbles. How many red marbles does he have now?"

Extra info: "3 blue marbles" (not needed)

Answer: 5 + 4 = 9 red marbles

Type B: Missing Information

Strategy: Identify what information is needed but not given

Example: "A movie ticket costs some money. John bought 3 tickets. How much did he pay?"

Missing info: Price of one ticket

Cannot solve without ticket price!

6. Guess-and-Check Problem Solving

Definition: A problem-solving strategy where you make an educated guess, check if it works, and adjust until you find the correct answer.

📋 Guess-and-Check Steps:

  1. Step 1: Understand - Read problem and identify what to find
  2. Step 2: Guess - Make a reasonable first guess
  3. Step 3: Check - Test if your guess works
  4. Step 4: Revise - If wrong, adjust guess (higher or lower)
  5. Step 5: Repeat - Continue until answer is found

✏️ Example:

Problem: There are 20 animals (chickens and cows). They have 56 legs total. How many cows are there?

Solution using Guess-and-Check:

Guess 1: 10 cows → (10×4) + (10×2) = 40+20 = 60 legs ✗ (too many)

Guess 2: 8 cows → (8×4) + (12×2) = 32+24 = 56 legs ✓

Answer: 8 cows

💡 Tips for Smart Guessing:

  • Start with a middle value
  • Organize guesses in a table
  • Adjust systematically (if too high, guess lower)
  • Keep track of all guesses to see patterns

7. Choose Numbers with Particular Sum, Difference, Product or Quotient

Definition: Selecting specific numbers from a set that produce a target result when combined with a particular operation.

🎯 General Strategy:

  1. Identify the target result
  2. Determine which operation is needed
  3. Look for number pairs/groups in the set
  4. Test combinations systematically
  5. Use inverse operations to check

📐 Quick Formulas:

OperationTo Find Numbers
SumNumber 1 + Number 2 = Target
DifferenceLarger - Smaller = Target
ProductNumber 1 × Number 2 = Target
QuotientDividend ÷ Divisor = Target

✏️ Example:

Given set: {12, 15, 18, 20, 24}

Find two numbers with:

• Sum = 39 → Answer: 15 + 24 = 39

• Product = 360 → Answer: 15 × 24 = 360

• Difference = 6 → Answer: 18 - 12 = 6

8. Mentally Add and Subtract Numbers Ending in Zeros

Definition: Quick mental calculation strategies for numbers that end with zeros (10, 100, 1000, etc.).

📝 Mental Math Strategies:

Strategy 1: Add Zeros Separately

For numbers like 300 + 500:

Think: 3 + 5 = 8, then add two zeros → 800

Strategy 2: Count by Hundreds/Thousands

2,400 + 300:

Think: 24 hundreds + 3 hundreds = 27 hundreds = 2,700

Strategy 3: Adjust for Easy Numbers

498 + 150:

Think: 500 + 150 = 650, then subtract 2 → 648

✏️ Practice Examples:

Addition:

• 600 + 400 = 1,000 (6+4=10, add two zeros)

• 3,500 + 2,000 = 5,500

• 4,800 + 1,200 = 6,000

Subtraction:

• 900 - 300 = 600 (9-3=6, add two zeros)

• 7,000 - 2,500 = 4,500

• 5,400 - 1,800 = 3,600

💡 Key Tips:

  • Focus on the non-zero digits first
  • Count the zeros and add them back
  • Use place value understanding (hundreds, thousands)
  • Practice skip counting (by 10s, 100s, 1000s)

Mixed Operations Quick Reference Chart

ConceptKey Strategy/Rule
Order of OperationsPEMDAS/BODMAS: Parentheses → Multiply/Divide → Add/Subtract
Mixed OperationsUse multiple operations in correct sequence
EstimationRound first, then calculate with ≈
Multi-Step ProblemsBreak into smaller steps, solve in order
Extra InformationCross out what's not needed for the question
Missing InformationIdentify what data is needed but not given
Guess-and-CheckGuess → Check → Revise → Repeat
Choose NumbersTest combinations to reach target result
Mental Math (Zeros)Work with non-zero digits, add zeros back

📚 Fourth Grade Mixed Operations - Complete Study Guide

Master these problem-solving strategies for math excellence! ✨

Shares: