Description
Long Division Visual Routine Worksheet | Step-by-Step Support with Checklists and Answer Key
Help students build confidence with long division using a clear, predictable, and visually supported routine. This printable worksheet is designed for learners who benefit from structured steps, repeated practice, reduced language, visual cues, and organized work spaces.
This resource breaks long division into manageable chunks instead of expecting students to complete the full algorithm all at once. Students begin by practicing division facts, then move through divide + multiply, divide + multiply + subtract, and finally the full long division process using the routine Divide, Multiply, Subtract, Bring Down, Repeat.
The worksheet includes color-coded step prompts, visual checkboxes, work boxes to support number alignment, partial-completion practice, guided problems, independent practice, and an answer key. It is especially helpful for students who struggle with working memory, multi-step math procedures, visual tracking, or keeping numbers lined up.
What’s Included
Included Page/Section
Purpose
Visual step card
Gives students a consistent long division routine to follow
Color-coded routine
Uses blue, green, red, and purple cues for each step
Short-word prompts
Reduces language load during math practice
Division fact warm-up
Builds confidence before the full algorithm
Guided long division practice
Walks students through each step with checkboxes
Partial-completion practice
Allows the teacher to complete some steps while the student practices one target step
Same-structure practice
Provides predictable 2-digit ÷ 1-digit problems
Independent practice
Gives students a chance to apply the routine with supports
Answer key
Makes checking work quick and easy
Skills Practiced
Students will practice understanding and applying the long division routine, using multiplication facts within division problems, subtracting during the algorithm, bringing down the next digit, maintaining place-value alignment, and using a visual checklist to complete multi-step math tasks.
Great For
This resource works well for special education math instruction, intervention groups, resource rooms, homeschool math practice, one-on-one tutoring, and students who benefit from visual supports and predictable routines. It may be especially useful for autistic students, students with ADHD, students with working memory challenges, and students who need extra support with multi-step math procedures.
Why Teachers Like It
The worksheet keeps the language simple, the layout structured, and the routine consistent. Instead of overwhelming students with too many directions at once, it teaches one piece of the process at a time and gradually increases independence. The built-in checklists and work boxes help students stay organized and reduce the chance of skipping steps.
File Format
This is a printable PDF resource. The download includes student worksheet pages and an answer key.
Suggested Use
For best results, have students point to each checklist step as they work. You may also let students use colored pencils, a multiplication chart, graph paper, or other supports while they are learning the routine. Supports can be faded gradually as students become more independent.
Highlights
Description
Long Division Visual Routine Worksheet | Step-by-Step Support with Checklists and Answer Key
Help students build confidence with long division using a clear, predictable, and visually supported routine. This printable worksheet is designed for learners who benefit from structured steps, repeated practice, reduced language, visual cues, and organized work spaces.
This resource breaks long division into manageable chunks instead of expecting students to complete the full algorithm all at once. Students begin by practicing division facts, then move through divide + multiply, divide + multiply + subtract, and finally the full long division process using the routine Divide, Multiply, Subtract, Bring Down, Repeat.
The worksheet includes color-coded step prompts, visual checkboxes, work boxes to support number alignment, partial-completion practice, guided problems, independent practice, and an answer key. It is especially helpful for students who struggle with working memory, multi-step math procedures, visual tracking, or keeping numbers lined up.
What’s Included
Included Page/Section
Purpose
Visual step card
Gives students a consistent long division routine to follow
Color-coded routine
Uses blue, green, red, and purple cues for each step
Short-word prompts
Reduces language load during math practice
Division fact warm-up
Builds confidence before the full algorithm
Guided long division practice
Walks students through each step with checkboxes
Partial-completion practice
Allows the teacher to complete some steps while the student practices one target step
Same-structure practice
Provides predictable 2-digit ÷ 1-digit problems
Independent practice
Gives students a chance to apply the routine with supports
Answer key
Makes checking work quick and easy
Skills Practiced
Students will practice understanding and applying the long division routine, using multiplication facts within division problems, subtracting during the algorithm, bringing down the next digit, maintaining place-value alignment, and using a visual checklist to complete multi-step math tasks.
Great For
This resource works well for special education math instruction, intervention groups, resource rooms, homeschool math practice, one-on-one tutoring, and students who benefit from visual supports and predictable routines. It may be especially useful for autistic students, students with ADHD, students with working memory challenges, and students who need extra support with multi-step math procedures.
Why Teachers Like It
The worksheet keeps the language simple, the layout structured, and the routine consistent. Instead of overwhelming students with too many directions at once, it teaches one piece of the process at a time and gradually increases independence. The built-in checklists and work boxes help students stay organized and reduce the chance of skipping steps.
File Format
This is a printable PDF resource. The download includes student worksheet pages and an answer key.
Suggested Use
For best results, have students point to each checklist step as they work. You may also let students use colored pencils, a multiplication chart, graph paper, or other supports while they are learning the routine. Supports can be faded gradually as students become more independent.




