Continental Math League (CML) Worksheets for Grades 4–6
Challenging, printable practice resources designed for upper elementary students preparing for CML-style contests. Problems focus on multi-step reasoning, number theory, geometry, and problem solving.
Grade 4–6 CML Practice Worksheets
Worksheets grouped by topic to build the diverse reasoning skills required by CML: algebraic thinking, fractions & decimals, geometry & measurement, rates & ratios, logic puzzles, and mock contests for timed practice.
Number Theory & Algebra
Problems on factors, multiples, modular reasoning, two-step equations, digit puzzles, and algebraic patterns tailored to upper elementary students.
View Practice Questions Open local section: Number Theory & AlgebraFractions, Decimals & Percents
Complex fraction operations, converting between forms, proportional reasoning, and percentage problems with multi-step setups.
View Practice Questions Open local section: Fractions, Decimals & PercentsGeometry & Measurement
Visual problems, area/volume reasoning, coordinate geometry basics, angle-chasing, and composite shape puzzles.
View Practice Questions Open local section: Geometry & MeasurementRatios, Proportions & Rates
Problems involving unit rates, mixture and work problems, and ratio tables with multi-step solutions.
View Practice Questions Open local section: Ratios, Proportions & RatesLogic & Problem Solving
Puzzles requiring reasoning, casework, parity, invariants, and combinatorics tailored to CML difficulty.
View Practice Questions Open local section: Logic & Problem SolvingMock CML Contests (Timed)
Timed 6-question mock contests with answer keys to simulate real CML meets and build contest stamina.
View Mock TestsSample Challenging Problems (Grades 4–6)
Number & Algebra
- Find the smallest positive integer n such that 2n, 3n, and 5n each end with the digit 2.
- Mary thinks of a number. She triples it, subtracts 7, and then divides by 4 to get 11. What number did she start with?
- There are two consecutive primes that differ by 2 (a twin prime pair). Give an example and explain why larger twin primes are rarer.
Fractions, Decimals & Ratios
- A recipe needs 2 1/2 cups of flour for every 3/4 cup of sugar. How much flour is needed for 5 cups of sugar?
- Three friends split $48 in the ratio 2:3:5. After spending $6, $4, and $10 respectively, who has the most money and how much remains?
Geometry & Visual Reasoning
- Square ABCD has side 10. A point P inside the square has distances PA=6, PB=8, PC=6. Find PD.
- A composite figure consists of a rectangle 12×8 and a semicircle of diameter 8 attached to one short side. Find its area (use π≈3.14).
Rates, Work & Mixtures
- Pipe A fills a tank in 6 hours, Pipe B in 8 hours. Both open for 2 hours, then A is closed. How long more does B take to fill the tank?
- A 10% salt solution is mixed with a 3% solution to get 5 liters of a 6% solution. How much of each was used? (Explain why this is or isn’t possible.)
Logic & Multi-step
- In a 5×5 grid, how many different rectangles (of any size) can you draw whose sides lie on the grid lines?
- At a fair, each ride costs 3 tokens. Sophie buys tokens for $12; each token costs the same. If she gets 3 extra tokens as a bonus, how many rides can she go on and how many tokens remain?
These samples illustrate CML-style reasoning: multi-step thinking, integrating concepts, and visual/number sense. Full worksheets contain dozens of similar problems with detailed solutions.
How to Use These Worksheets
- Practice in timed blocks to simulate CML meets (6 problems in 30 minutes).
- Focus on explaining solutions step-by-step, not only arriving at answers.
- Mix problem types—algebra, geometry, logic—to develop flexible strategies.