Read each question carefully. Choose the best answer (A–E) and mark it clearly. There is only one correct answer per question unless stated otherwise.
1.
There are 3,000 people living in Lakeside, rounded to the nearest thousand. What is the greatest number of people that could live there?
A.2,500
B.3,500
C.3,499
D.3,049
E.3,499.5
2.
Zoe needs to round 1.85 to the nearest tenth. What number should they end up with?
A.1.85
B.1.9
C.2
D.1.8
E.18.5
3.
What is 2,650 rounded to the nearest 1,000 feet?
A.30,000 feet
B.3,000 feet
C.2,700 feet
D.2,000 feet
E.2,500 feet
4.
The total miles (365 250) is rounded to the nearest 10 000 for a report. What should the total miles be in the report?
A.365 000
B.360 000
C.300 000
D.3 650 000
E.370 000
5.
Mia measured two parts of the school pool in the morning: 1.3 m and 1.3 m. The total depth is 2.6 m. What is Mia's depth rounded to the nearest metre?
A.3 m
B.260 cm
C.2 m
D.2 m (round each part first: 1 + 1)
E.2.6 m
6.
On a chilly morning, Lucas stood against the measuring board and the mark was 1.635 m. What is Lucas's height rounded to the nearest whole centimetre?
A.163
B.1635
C.164
D.160
E.1.635 m
7.
Noah looked at his receipt after buying a model at the toy shop; the total was £867 this morning. What is this figure rounded to the nearest hundred pounds?
A.£870
B.£850
C.£907
D.£900
E.£800
8.
Ethan measured the skate ramp at the park on a weekend and it was 4.26 m long. How long is 4.26 m rounded to the nearest metre?
A.3 m
B.26 m
C.4 m
D.42 m
E.426 m
9.
Which of the following shows 19.55 rounded to the nearest tenth?
A.19.55
B.19.5
C.19.6
D.195.5
E.20
10.
Liam helped the library in the afternoon and counted 554,499 books. How many books is that to the nearest 100,000?
A.554,000
B.600,000
C.500,000
D.700,000
E.100,000
Practice feedback survey
Optional: after marking, tick the main reason for each mistake (you can tick more than one if it helps). Count the ticks in each column and write the totals in the bottom row—patterns here make revision easier than a score alone. When printing, this survey starts on its own page so you can skip that sheet in the print range if you do not need it.
Q
Didn't Understand the Concept
Misread the question
Calculation Error
Partial Step Error
Wrong Option Marking
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Total
Didn't Understand the Concept
The underlying idea or method was unclear—worth revisiting explanations or examples before more drill.
Misread the question
The topic was familiar, but a detail was missed (e.g. “not”, units, or what exactly to find).
Calculation Error
The approach was reasonable, but arithmetic, copying a figure, or a single step was wrong.
Partial Step Error
Working started correctly but went off track part-way—often a wrong operation or missed step.
Wrong Option Marking
The working or thinking pointed to the right answer, but the wrong letter was circled or recorded.
Answer key
Maths · Rounding Up and Down · 4 April 2026
1. C — 3,499
2. B — 1.9
3. B — 3,000 feet
4. E — 370 000
5. A — 3 m
6. C — 164
7. D — £900
8. C — 4 m
9. C — 19.6
10. B — 600,000
Parent analytics — how Studoo shows progress
This worksheet is a one-off snapshot. In the Studoo app, parents get live dashboards similar to the examples below—so you see trends, topic gaps, and why marks are lost, not only final scores.
Subject mastery
Strengths by subject at a glance—prioritise revision without guesswork.
Weekly score trend
Spot improvement or dips early—keep 11+ prep consistent week to week.
Answer mix (correct · incorrect · not sure)
See confidence gaps—not just the headline score after each session.
Speed vs accuracy
Highlights rushing: very fast answers with lower accuracy often mean traps or careless errors.
Turn this paper into ongoing insight
Marking a printable sheet tells you the score for today. Studoo keeps a running picture of progress, habits, and topics to fix first—the same ideas behind the charts above, personalised for your child.
Subject & topic accuracy — see exactly where marks are lost, not just totals.
Weekly trends — notice plateaus or dips while there is time to adjust revision.
Behavioural signals — pacing, "not sure" usage, and common exam-style traps.
Actionable next steps — focused topics and suggestions instead of generic worksheets alone.
studoo.co.uk — start a free trial, practise online with instant marking, and use the parent dashboard to track progress through to exam day.