Free maths practice app

Visual division practice app

A quick classroom-ready app for modelling division by sharing counters into equal groups and matching the model to division equations.

Share into groups

Students share a total number of counters into a target number of equal groups.

Make groups of

Students build equal groups with a target number of counters in each group.

Move counters

Students add group spaces, select counters and place them into groups before checking.

Read equations

The app shows sharing and group-size equations so students connect the model to division language.

What students practise

The app is built for visual division practice where students construct an equal-groups model before checking the answer.

  • sharing counters into a given number of equal groups
  • making groups with a given number of counters in each group
  • adding group spaces and moving counters into them
  • checking that every counter has been shared
  • reading the matching sharing and group-size division equations

How it fits a lesson

Use it before division fact practice, during small-group support, or whenever students need to see what the division equation means.

  • start with share into groups when the number of groups is known
  • use make groups of when the group size is known
  • ask students to explain what the total, group count and group size mean
  • move to the division facts app once students can connect the model to the equation

Why it helps

Division becomes clearer when students can see the total, the equal groups and the size of each group at the same time.

  • makes equal groups visible
  • connects sharing actions to division equations
  • supports students before abstract division fact practice

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the visual division app free?

Yes. Students, teachers and families can open the visual division app in a browser for free.

What question types are included?

The app includes share into groups, make groups of and mixed practice.

How do students answer?

Students add groups, move counters from the bank into the groups, then check whether the groups are equal and match the prompt.

Does it include remainders?

No. The app uses questions that can be shared into equal groups so students can focus on the division model.