practice-game

Halving / Equal Sharing Game: Learn to Divide Equally

In primary one admission interviews, math concepts like 'halving' or 'equal sharing' are commonly assessed. This game uses drag-and-drop interaction to help children divide objects into two equal groups, mastering the concept of 'half' and 'equal division' through hands-on practice. Multiple difficulty levels guide children progressively. (Note: Interview content may vary by year; refer to official school announcements.)

Interactive tool

Organise it now

What Parents Need To Know

Use this practice page as a short daily routine. Choose a skill, let the child answer naturally, then review one strength and one next step.

  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.

How To Use This Page

Use this practice page as a short daily routine. Choose a skill, let the child answer naturally, then review one strength and one next step.

  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
  • Practise briefly and regularly, focusing on natural responses.

Decision Checklist

Use this practice page as a short daily routine. Choose a skill, let the child answer naturally, then review one strength and one next step.

  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
  • Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.
What should parents verify first?

Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.

How should we use this page?

Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.

What is the safest next step?

Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.

How often should we practise?

Record the decision, evidence and next action in your family checklist.

Where should official facts come from?

Practise briefly and regularly, focusing on natural responses.

Next pages

Keep momentum

Sources

Official sources to verify first