CBSE Class 5 Math Practice
Class 5 is a consolidation year on the CBSE curriculum — but consolidation does not mean easy. The topics introduced in Class 4 (fractions, decimals, percentages, data handling) now get harder: fractions become mixed numbers and unlike denominators; measurement problems involve multi-step unit conversions; data handling moves from reading charts to interpreting them. This is the year before the serious middle-school push begins, and the children who enter Class 6 strong are almost always the ones who practiced consistently in Class 5.
AIMathTest generates a brand-new 10-question test every time your child opens the app. No question ever repeats. The AI engine tracks the Class 5 NCERT chapter sequence and adjusts topic weighting as the year progresses — more geometry in the first term, more fractions and percentages toward the second.
Topics covered for Class 5 CBSE
- Addition and subtraction (larger numbers, mental math at speed)
- Multiplication (multi-digit, introduction to estimation)
- Division (long division, divisibility rules)
- Fractions (mixed numbers, unlike denominators, operations on fractions)
- Decimals (operations with decimals, place value to thousandths)
- Percentages (percent of a quantity, simple percentage problems)
- Geometry (angles — acute, obtuse, reflex; area and perimeter of rectangles)
- Measurement (complex unit conversions, elapsed time problems)
- Data handling (bar graphs, pictographs, interpreting data)
- Word problems that combine multiple topics in a single question
Why Class 5 matters even though it looks like review
Parents sometimes assume Class 5 is just "more of Class 4." It is not. The jump from recognising fractions to operating on fractions with unlike denominators is steep. Most children who struggle in Class 6 algebra can trace the problem back to shaky fractions from Class 5. AIMathTest's daily tests catch those gaps early — the AI notices if your child keeps missing fraction operations and surfaces more of them the next day.
Ten minutes, every day, no negotiating
We built AIMathTest around the one thing that actually works: a short, consistent daily habit. Ten questions, instant feedback, a streak to protect. The app does not lecture; it does not run video tutorials. It generates problems, marks them, and shows your child exactly where they went wrong. That is the whole product.
Pricing
Ten tests per month on the free tier. Unlimited for ₹50/month — that is less than most children's weekly pocket money, and significantly less than a single tutoring session. No ads. No hidden charges.
Related
Also practicing: CBSE Class 4, Class 6, Class 7. Other boards: IB, Cambridge.