Free · Printable · TEKS 6.3D · Number & Operations (Computation)

TEKS 6.3D Worksheets — Grade 6 Add, subtract, multiply, and divide integers fluently

200+ Texas-aligned practice questions on this exact Grade 6 standard. Print at home or practice online with a built-in AI tutor. No sign-up, no paywall.

What TEKS 6.3D says: Add, subtract, multiply, and divide integers fluently.

This page has 200+ practice questions tagged specifically to TEKS 6.3D. Below: a sample of 8 with answers and explanations so you can preview the worksheet before printing. Every question goes through an AI quality gate (gpt-4o for content review, Claude Sonnet 4.5 for math verification) before publishing.

Cognitive demand: medium. Typical question shape: Direct integer operation, e.g., −8 × 3 or 12 ÷ (−4).

Zara is planning to make a fruit salad for her family reunion. She wants to mix 4 different types of fruit, and she has decided to use 3 apples, 2 bananas, and 5 strawberries. If she wants to keep the total number of pieces of fruit to 15, how many more pieces of fruit does she need to add?

  1. 5
  2. 6
  3. 4
  4. 3

Why: To find out how many more pieces of fruit Zara needs to add, first add the pieces she already has: 3 apples + 2 bananas + 5 strawberries = 10 pieces of fruit. She wants to have a total of 15 pieces, so 15 - 10 = 5. Therefore, Zara needs to add 5 more pieces of fruit.

Victoria went to the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo with her family. They spent $45 on tickets and $30 on food. If they had a total of $120 to spend, how much money do they have left after buying tickets and food?

  1. $45
  2. $50
  3. $30
  4. $25

Why: To find out how much money Victoria and her family have left, first add the costs of tickets and food: $45 + $30 = $75. Then, subtract that total from their budget: $120 - $75 = $45. Therefore, they have $45 remaining.

Amara is keeping track of the number of books she reads each month for her book club. In January, she read 5 books, in February, she read 7 books, and in March, she read 9 books. How many books did she read in total over these three months?

  1. 21
  2. 19
  3. 22
  4. 20

Why: To find the total number of books Amara read, add the number of books from each month: 5 + 7 + 9 = 21. Therefore, the correct answer is 21.

Adriana is studying the depths of the Ogallala Aquifer in Texas for a school project. She collects the following depth measurements in feet: 150, 175, 200, and 225. What is the average depth of the Ogallala Aquifer based on her measurements?

  1. 187.5
  2. 185
  3. 175
  4. 200

Why: To find the average depth, first, add the measurements: 150 + 175 + 200 + 225 = 750. Then, divide the total by the number of measurements: 750 ÷ 4 = 187.5. Therefore, the average depth of the Ogallala Aquifer based on Adriana's measurements is 187.5 feet.

Omar is organizing a school event and needs to order snacks. He plans to buy 3 boxes of cookies and each box contains 24 cookies. If he also buys 2 boxes of juice and each box contains 12 juice boxes, how many total snacks does Omar have?

  1. 96
  2. 72
  3. 48
  4. 60

Why: To find the total number of snacks, first calculate the number of cookies: 3 boxes × 24 cookies per box = 72 cookies. Then calculate the number of juice boxes: 2 boxes × 12 juice boxes per box = 24 juice boxes. Finally, add both amounts together: 72 cookies + 24 juice boxes = 96 total snacks.

Salma is planning a trip to the State Fair of Texas in Dallas. She wants to buy 3 tickets for her and her two friends. Each ticket costs $15. If she also wants to spend an additional $10 on a snack and $5 on a drink, how much money will Salma need in total for her trip?

  1. $55
  2. $60
  3. $65
  4. $70

Why: To find the total amount Salma needs, we first calculate the cost of the tickets: 3 tickets × $15 = $45. Next, we add the cost of the snack ($10) and the drink ($5): $10 + $5 = $15. Finally, we add the total ticket cost to the total snack and drink cost: $45 + $15 = $60. Therefore, Salma will need a total of $60 for her trip.

Nia is organizing a bake sale and has baked 72 cookies to sell. If she wants to pack the cookies into boxes with 8 cookies in each box, how many boxes will she need to pack all the cookies?

  1. 9
  2. 8
  3. 10
  4. 7

Why: To find out how many boxes Nia needs, divide the total number of cookies by the number of cookies per box. So, 72 cookies ÷ 8 cookies per box = 9 boxes. Therefore, Nia will need 9 boxes to pack all the cookies.

Luis is planning a picnic at the San Antonio River Walk. He bought 3 packs of enchiladas, with each pack containing 8 enchiladas. However, he accidentally dropped 5 enchiladas on the way to the picnic. How many enchiladas does Luis have left to serve at the picnic?

  1. 19
  2. 24
  3. 15
  4. 20

Why: Luis bought 3 packs of enchiladas, so he has 3 * 8 = 24 enchiladas. After dropping 5 enchiladas, he has 24 - 5 = 19 enchiladas left to serve at the picnic.

Common questions about TEKS 6.3D

What is TEKS 6.3D?

TEKS 6.3D is a Grade 6 Number & Operations (Computation) standard from the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills. The standard says: Add, subtract, multiply, and divide integers fluently.

How many TEKS 6.3D practice questions are available?

200+ practice questions tagged to TEKS 6.3D. All free to print or practice online. We pull a fresh set each time you print a worksheet so your kid doesn't see the same questions twice.

What kind of questions test TEKS 6.3D on the STAAR?

Direct integer operation, e.g., −8 × 3 or 12 ÷ (−4). TEKS 6.3D is a medium-cognitive-demand standard — 1-2 step questions are typical.

Where do these questions come from?

Generated by our AI pipeline, then independently quality-gated by two cross-vendor models (gpt-4o for content review, Claude Sonnet 4.5 for math verification) before publishing. Every question is tagged to TEKS 6.3D and modeled on real STAAR item shapes. No typos, no wrong answer keys, no broken explanations.