Geometry Practice
Shapes, angles, area, and volume
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Kindergarten
Ages 5-6
Grade 1
Ages 6-7
Grade 2
Ages 7-8
Grade 3
Ages 8-9
Grade 4
Ages 9-10
Grade 5
Ages 10-11
Grade 6
Ages 11-12
Grade 7
Ages 12-13
Grade 8
Ages 13-14
Featured Geometry Practice
Grade 8 Pythagorean Theorem Practice
Practice grade 8 Pythagorean theorem with problems finding missing sides of right triangles. Eighth grade introduces this fundamental geometric relationship.
Perimeter Practice
Practice finding the perimeter of rectangles, squares, and triangles. Perimeter is the distance around the outside of a shape.
Area of Rectangles Practice
Practice finding the area of rectangles and squares by multiplying length times width. Area measures the space inside a two-dimensional shape.
Volume of Rectangular Prisms Practice
Practice finding the volume of rectangular prisms and cubes by multiplying length times width times height. Volume measures the space inside a three-dimensional shape.
Angles Practice
Practice measuring and classifying angles as acute, right, obtuse, or straight. Learn about complementary and supplementary angles.
Coordinate Plane Practice
Practice plotting points on the coordinate plane and identifying quadrants. Understanding the coordinate system is essential for graphing and geometry.
Perimeter of Rectangles Practice
Practice finding the perimeter of rectangles and squares. Add all four sides, or use the formula: P = 2(length + width) for rectangles, P = 4s for squares.
Area of Triangles Practice
Practice finding the area of triangles using the formula: Area = (1/2) × base × height. Remember to divide the product of base and height by 2.
Circumference of Circles Practice
Practice finding the circumference of circles. Use C = 2πr when given radius, or C = πd when given diameter. Using π ≈ 3.14 for calculations.
Area of Circles Practice
Practice finding the area of circles using the formula: Area = πr². Square the radius first, then multiply by π (using π ≈ 3.14).
Coordinate Plane Plotting Practice
Practice identifying quadrants and plotting points on the coordinate plane. Remember: x comes first (horizontal), y comes second (vertical).
Surface Area of Rectangular Prisms Practice
Practice finding surface area of rectangular prisms. Add the areas of all 6 faces: SA = 2(lw + lh + wh). For cubes: SA = 6s².
Pythagorean Theorem Practice
Practice the Pythagorean theorem: a² + b² = c² where c is the hypotenuse. Use this formula to find missing sides of right triangles.
Angle Relationships Practice
Practice angle relationships: complementary angles sum to 90°, supplementary angles sum to 180°, vertical angles are equal.
Grade 8 Geometry Practice
Practice geometric transformations for eighth grade: reflections, rotations, and translations on the coordinate plane.
Basic Shapes Identification Practice
Practice identifying basic shapes and their properties for first grade. Learn the number of sides and corners for common shapes.
Quadrilaterals Properties Practice
Learn quadrilateral properties including perimeter, area, and angle relationships. Compare squares, rectangles, parallelograms, and trapezoids.
Triangles Properties Practice
Explore triangle properties including area, perimeter, and angle relationships. Work with equilateral, isosceles, scalene, and right triangles.
Circles Properties Practice
Master circle calculations including radius, diameter, circumference, and area. Apply pi in practical geometry problems.
Volume of 3D Shapes Practice
Calculate volume of cubes and rectangular prisms. Understanding volume is essential for real-world measurement applications.
Surface Area of 3D Shapes Practice
Calculate surface area of cubes and rectangular prisms. Surface area skills apply to packaging, construction, and design.
Area and Perimeter Word Problems
Solve word problems involving area and perimeter of rectangles and squares. Apply formulas to real-world measurement scenarios.
Area and Perimeter Practice
Area vs. perimeter is the geometry vocabulary kids most often confuse, and the only fix is enough practice that the formulas become reflexes. Perimeter is the fence around the yard (add the sides); area is the grass inside (multiply length × width). These problems alternate between the two so your child has to actively decide which formula to use, rather than mindlessly multiplying every pair of numbers. The visual analogy of a fenced yard works wonders if you find them mixing the two up.
Free Geometry Quiz for Grade 4
Fourth grade geometry covers a lot of vocabulary in a short stretch — polygon names, angle measures, lines of symmetry, faces and edges of solids. This quiz hits the highest-yield questions that show up across most state tests and curricula. If your child blanks on questions like 'how many sides does a pentagon have,' make a one-page cheat sheet of polygon names; geometry vocabulary almost always rewards memorization more than reasoning at this level.
About Geometry
Geometry explores shapes, angles, area, and volume. From identifying basic shapes to the Pythagorean theorem, our problems develop spatial reasoning at every grade level.