Finding Area
- Find the area of a rectangle by multiplying its length and width.
- Use the correct square units (like cm² or m²) when writing an area answer.
These metric units area and perimeter worksheets help students practice geometry calculations using centimeters, meters, and other metric measurements. The collection includes 9 different worksheet types covering rectangles, circles, surface area, and word problems, making metric system learning practical and comprehensive.
Students learn to find the area of shapes using grid-based counting methods. Worksheets progress from counting full blocks to working with partial blocks, then move to using rows and columns for rectangular areas. Activities also include finding area by tiling, continuing area patterns, and calculating the area of right triangles on a grid. These resources align with third through sixth grade standards and help students transition from counting to using area formulas.
These worksheets cover a comprehensive range of quadrilateral measurement skills. Students find the area and perimeter of rectangles, explore rectilinear shapes by decomposing them into smaller rectangles, create rectangles with given area or perimeter constraints, and work with scale factors. Problem sets include whole numbers, decimals, and fractions, and span third through seventh grade standards.
These worksheets cover the essential circle measurement formulas. Students practice finding the area using A = πr², the circumference using C = πd or C = 2πr, and solving for both in combined problem sets. Activities include working with radius and diameter values and applying pi in calculations. Aligned with seventh grade geometry standards.
Students practice finding a missing side length of a rectangle or right triangle when given the area or perimeter. These worksheets reinforce the relationship between side lengths, area, and perimeter through reverse calculation — dividing area by a known side or subtracting known sides from a total perimeter. Problem sets span third grade through middle school, with some including decimal values.
These worksheets present area and perimeter concepts through word problems and three-dimensional shapes. Students read real-world scenarios to determine whether they need to calculate area or perimeter of rectangles, and they find the surface area of prisms and other 3D figures by adding up the areas of each face. Aligned with fourth and sixth grade standards.