German mathematics curriculum: Grade 3Divisibility rules for 2, 5, and 10V6HShare skillCopy the link to this skillshare to facebookshare to twitterTime to get in the zone!Your teacher would like you to focus on skills in .Let's pick a skill from these categories.Let's go!5Divisibility rules for 2, 5, and 10V6HShare videoCopy the link to this videoshare to facebookshare to twitterYou are watching a video preview. Become a member to get full access!PlayPlayNaN00:00PlaySeek 10 seconds backwardsSeek 10 seconds forward00:00 / 00:45MuteClick to volume controlUse the arrows to control the volumeEnable CaptionsSettingsShow Full screenYou've reached the end of this video preview, but the learning doesn't have to stop!Join IXL today!Become a memberSign inIncomplete answerYou did not finish the question. Do you want to go back to the question?Go backSubmitLearn with an exampleorWatch a videoIs 67 divisible by 2?yesnoSubmitBack to practiceref_doc_title.Excellent! You got that right!Learn with an exampleorWatch a videoJumping to level 1 of 1Excellent!Now entering the Challenge Zone—are you ready?Teacher toolsGroup JamLive ClassroomLeaderboardsWork it outNot feeling ready yet? These can help:X.7Division facts up to 10X.7Division facts up to 10 - Third grade M8T A.1Place value names up to ten thousandsA.1Place value names up to ten thousands - Third grade A8F Lesson: Divisibility rulesLearn about divisibility rules!What is divisibility?Divisibility rules and examplesLesson: Divisibility rules
Work it outNot feeling ready yet? These can help:X.7Division facts up to 10X.7Division facts up to 10 - Third grade M8T A.1Place value names up to ten thousandsA.1Place value names up to ten thousands - Third grade A8F Lesson: Divisibility rulesLearn about divisibility rules!What is divisibility?Divisibility rules and examplesLesson: Divisibility rules
Learn about divisibility rules!What is divisibility?Divisibility rules and examplesLesson: Divisibility rules