Step #1: Go to the first page.
Upon opening the collection you have created, you will be redirected to the default page which is the first page.
In the image shown below, the chosen collection is the “Default Collection.” This is what the first page looks like:
Step #2: Adding a template.
For this demonstration, I will be adding the first template among the “Long Division” template. This is what the first page looks like after:
As seen in the worksheet above, there is a dividend, divisor, and remainder.
Now, I will reduce the rows and columns to “1.”
Afterward, click on the “Update Worksheet” button.
Now, I will be adding the fifth template among the “Long Division” templates. I also reduced the rows and columns to “1.”
This is what the worksheet looks like after:
As seen in the worksheet above, there is a dividend and divisor but there is no remainder.
Now, I will be adding the ninth template among the “Long Division” templates. I also reduced the rows and columns to “1.”
This is what the worksheet looks like after:
As seen in the worksheet above, it is guided with boxes wherein the numbers must be inputted.
Now, I will be adding the fourteenth template among the “Long Division” templates. I also reduced the rows and columns to “1.”
This is what the worksheet looks like after:
As seen in the worksheet above, there is no remainder box.
Now, I will be adding the seventeenth template among the “Long Division” templates. I also reduced the rows and columns to “1.”
This is what the worksheet looks like after:
As seen in the worksheet above, it is the dotted version with a remainder.
Now, I will be adding the twenty-first template among the “Long Division” templates. I also reduced the rows and columns to “1.”
This is what the worksheet looks like after:
As seen in the worksheet above, it is the dotted version without a remainder.
Now, I will be adding the twenty-fifth template among the “Long Division” templates. I also reduced the rows and columns to “1.”
This is what the worksheet looks like after:
As seen in the worksheet above, it is the dashed version with a remainder.
Now, I will be adding the twenty-ninth template among the “Long Division” templates. I also reduced the rows and columns to “1.”
This is what the worksheet looks like after:
As seen in the worksheet above, it is the dashed version without a remainder.