Year 7 Mathematics | Victorian Curriculum 2.0
Integers
Topic 01 | Number & Algebra | Practice
How this topic is organised

The Year 7 core covers what the VC2.0 curriculum expects at this level: comparing, ordering, adding, and subtracting integers (VC2M7N08).

Extension material introduces multiplication and division of integers - formally part of Year 8 (VC2M8N04), but included here because it sits naturally with the four operations. Challenge material brings the operations together with order-of-operations traps.

Tackle the core fluently before moving on. Extension is optional; challenge is optional for most students.

Year 7 core

At the Year 7 level you should be able to:

  • place integers on a number line and order them from smallest to largest,
  • understand absolute value as distance from zero,
  • add and subtract integers, including when one or both are negative,
  • use integers to describe real-world situations like temperature, elevation, money, and floors.
Why do negative numbers exist?

Counting starts at 1,2,3,…1, 2, 3, \ldots1,2,3,… — but the real world has things that go below a starting point. Temperatures drop below zero. Bank accounts go into debt. Elevators go underground. Negative numbers extend the number line in the other direction so mathematics can describe all of these naturally, using the same operations you already know.

Worked example 0 Real-world example: reading a weather map

Melbourne’s forecast shows overnight lows of −2°-2°−2°C on Monday and 5°5°5°C on Tuesday. How much warmer is Tuesday night?

0°C-2°C5°C10°C7°
  1. Identify the two temperatures: −2-2−2 and 555.
  2. Find the difference: 5−(−2)=5+2=75 - (-2) = 5 + 2 = 75−(−2)=5+2=7.
  3. Tuesday night is 7°7°7°C warmer.

Key idea: subtracting a negative is the same as adding — you move further right on the number line.

1. What integers are

The integers are the whole numbers, their opposites, and zero:

…,−3, −2, −1, 0, 1, 2, 3,…\ldots, -3,\ -2,\ -1,\ 0,\ 1,\ 2,\ 3, \ldots…,−3, −2, −1, 0, 1, 2, 3,…

Every integer has a place on the number line. Numbers get bigger as you move to the right, and smaller as you move to the left.

-10 -9 -8 -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
The integers from -10 to 10.

2. Comparing and ordering

−5-5−5 is smaller than −2-2−2 because −5-5−5 sits further to the left on the number line, even though the number 555 is bigger than 222.

-6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 -5 -2
-5 sits to the left of -2, so -5 < -2.
Reading negatives

Imagine temperature. A winter night of −5 ∘-5\,^\circ−5∘C is colder than −2 ∘-2\,^\circ−2∘C, so −5-5−5 is the smaller number.

3. Absolute value

The absolute value of an integer is its distance from zero on the number line. Distance is never negative.

∣−7∣=7,∣4∣=4,∣0∣=0.|{-7}| = 7, \qquad |4| = 4, \qquad |0| = 0.∣−7∣=7,∣4∣=4,∣0∣=0.
Absolute value
∣a∣={−a,if a≥0,−a,if a<0.|a| = \begin{cases} \phantom{-}a, & \text{if } a \geq 0, \\ -a, & \text{if } a < 0. \end{cases}∣a∣={−a,−a,​if a≥0,if a<0.​

4. Adding and subtracting - walking it out on the number line

Use the number line first, before any rules. Adding moves you right, subtracting moves you left.

Worked example 1 Start at -8, move 3 right

Evaluate   −8+3\;-8 + 3−8+3.

Start at −8-8−8. Adding 333 moves three steps to the right, so you land on −5-5−5.

-10 -9 -8 -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 start +3
-8 + 3 = -5
−8+3=−5.-8 + 3 = -5.−8+3=−5.
Worked example 2 Start at 2, move 6 left

Evaluate   2−6\;2 - 62−6.

Start at 222. Subtracting 666 moves six steps to the left, so you land on −4-4−4.

-6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 start -6
2 - 6 = -4
2−6=−4.2 - 6 = -4.2−6=−4.

5. The “minus a minus” trick

Two negative signs side by side flip into a plus. Think of it as “taking away a debt is the same as gaining money”.

Two signs meeting
a−(−b)=a+b.a - (-b) = a + b.a−(−b)=a+b.
Worked example 3 Subtracting a negative

Evaluate   4−(−7)\;4 - (-7)4−(−7).

Rewrite −(−7)-(-7)−(−7) as +7+7+7:

4−(−7)  =  4+7  =  11.4 - (-7) \;=\; 4 + 7 \;=\; 11.4−(−7)=4+7=11.

6. Quick rules for add and subtract

Once the number line picture is clear, these shortcuts help for bigger numbers:

Adding and subtracting integers

Same signs: add the sizes, keep the sign
(+6)+(+3)=+9,(−6)+(−3)=−9.(+6) + (+3) = +9, \qquad (-6) + (-3) = -9.(+6)+(+3)=+9,(−6)+(−3)=−9.
Different signs: subtract sizes, keep the sign of whichever is bigger
(+8)+(−3)=+5,(−8)+(+3)=−5.(+8) + (-3) = +5, \qquad (-8) + (+3) = -5.(+8)+(−3)=+5,(−8)+(+3)=−5.
Turn subtraction into addition of the opposite
a−b  =  a+(−b).a - b \;=\; a + (-b).a−b=a+(−b).

7. A real-world example

Worked example 4 Temperature at 9 p.m.

At 666 a.m. the temperature in Ballarat was −4 ∘-4\,^\circ−4∘C. By noon it had risen by 9 ∘9\,^\circ9∘C. At 999 p.m. it was 6 ∘6\,^\circ6∘C lower than at noon. What was the temperature at 999 p.m.?

  1. Temperature at noon: −4+9=5 ∘-4 + 9 = 5\,^\circ−4+9=5∘C.
  2. Temperature at 9 p.m.: 5−6=−1 ∘5 - 6 = -1\,^\circ5−6=−1∘C.
−1 ∘C\boxed{-1\,^\circ\text{C}}−1∘C​

Practice: Year 7 core

Fluency

Ordering and absolute value

    1. Order from smallest to largest:   −7, 3, 0, −2, −10, 5\;-7,\ 3,\ 0,\ -2,\ -10,\ 5−7, 3, 0, −2, −10, 5.
    2. Which is smaller: −4-4−4 or −9-9−9?
    3. Evaluate ∣−13∣|{-13}|∣−13∣.
    4. Evaluate ∣9∣−∣−4∣|9| - |{-4}|∣9∣−∣−4∣.
    5. True or false: ∣−6∣=6|{-6}| = 6∣−6∣=6.
Fluency

Adding and subtracting

    1. Work out   −6+4\;-6 + 4−6+4.
    2. Work out   −5+(−8)\;-5 + (-8)−5+(−8).
    3. Work out   12+(−15)\;12 + (-15)12+(−15).
    4. Work out   −3+10\;-3 + 10−3+10.
    5. Work out   −9−3\;-9 - 3−9−3.
    6. Work out   −7−(−10)\;-7 - (-10)−7−(−10).
    7. Work out   4−(−11)\;4 - (-11)4−(−11).
    8. Work out   −20−(−20)\;-20 - (-20)−20−(−20).
    9. Work out   0−7\;0 - 70−7.
    10. Work out   −2+(−6)−(−4)\;-2 + (-6) - (-4)−2+(−6)−(−4).
Reasoning

Fill in the missing number

    1.   −7+□=−2\;-7 + \square = -2−7+□=−2.
    2.   □+4=−1\;\square + 4 = -1□+4=−1.
    3.   −5−□=−12\;-5 - \square = -12−5−□=−12.
    4.   □−(−3)=8\;\square - (-3) = 8□−(−3)=8.
Problem solving

Real-world problems

    1. The temperature on Mount Hotham was −8 ∘-8\,^\circ−8∘C at midnight. It rose by 3 ∘3\,^\circ3∘C each hour until 666 a.m. What was the temperature at 666 a.m.?
    2. A submarine is 120120120 m below sea level. It ascends 353535 m, then descends 484848 m. What is its new depth, written as an integer?
    3. Mira has a bank balance of -$45 (an overdraft). She deposits $120 and then pays a bill of $38. What is her balance now?
    4. A lift is on floor −3-3−3 (basement level 3). It goes up 777 floors, then down 555, then up 222. On which floor does it stop?
    5. At dawn the temperature in Cooma was −6 ∘-6\,^\circ−6∘C. By mid-morning it had risen to 4 ∘4\,^\circ4∘C. By how many degrees did the temperature rise?
    6. A diver starts at sea level (000) and descends to −24-24−24 m, then rises 999 m to look at a reef. What is her depth now?

Extension

Beyond Year 7 core

The multiplication and division of integers below are formally part of Year 8 (VC2M8N04). They are placed here because they fit naturally with the four operations on integers, but there is no pressure to master them in Year 7.

8. Multiplying and dividing integers

Think of (−3)×2(-3) \times 2(−3)×2 as “two lots of negative three”:

(−3)+(−3)=−6,so(−3)×2=−6.(-3) + (-3) = -6, \quad \text{so} \quad (-3) \times 2 = -6.(−3)+(−3)=−6,so(−3)×2=−6.

(−3)×(−2)(-3) \times (-2)(−3)×(−2) means “take away two lots of negative three”. Taking away a loss is a gain, so the answer is +6+6+6.

Sign rules for x and /

Same signs give a positive answer
(+)×(+)=+,(−)×(−)=+.(+)\times(+) = +, \qquad (-)\times(-) = +.(+)×(+)=+,(−)×(−)=+.
Different signs give a negative answer
(+)×(−)=−,(−)×(+)=−.(+)\times(-) = -, \qquad (-)\times(+) = -.(+)×(−)=−,(−)×(+)=−.
Division follows the same pattern
++=+,−−=+,+−=−,−+=−.\frac{+}{+} = +, \quad \frac{-}{-} = +, \quad \frac{+}{-} = -, \quad \frac{-}{+} = -.++​=+,−−​=+,−+​=−,+−​=−.
Count the negatives

An even number of negative factors gives a positive result; an odd number gives a negative result.

Worked example 5 Multiplying several integers

Evaluate   (−2)×3×(−4)×(−1)\;(-2) \times 3 \times (-4) \times (-1)(−2)×3×(−4)×(−1).

  1. Multiply the sizes: 2×3×4×1=242 \times 3 \times 4 \times 1 = 242×3×4×1=24.
  2. Count negatives: three of them. Three is odd, so the answer is negative.
(−2)×3×(−4)×(−1)=−24.(-2) \times 3 \times (-4) \times (-1) = -24.(−2)×3×(−4)×(−1)=−24.

Practice: Extension

Fluency

Multiplying and dividing

    1. Work out   (−6)×7\;(-6) \times 7(−6)×7.
    2. Work out   (−8)×(−5)\;(-8) \times (-5)(−8)×(−5).
    3. Work out   9×(−4)\;9 \times (-4)9×(−4).
    4. Work out   (−12)×(−3)×2\;(-12) \times (-3) \times 2(−12)×(−3)×2.
    5. Work out   (−2)3\;(-2)^3(−2)3.
    6. Work out   (−5)2\;(-5)^2(−5)2.
    7. Work out   −24÷6\;-24 \div 6−24÷6.
    8. Work out   (−36)÷(−9)\;(-36) \div (-9)(−36)÷(−9).
    9. Work out   45÷(−5)\;45 \div (-5)45÷(−5).
    10. Work out   (−100)÷(−25)\;(-100) \div (-25)(−100)÷(−25).
Reasoning

Sign reasoning and missing values

    1. Without calculating, decide whether (−17)×(−23)×(−4)(-17) \times (-23) \times (-4)(−17)×(−23)×(−4) is positive or negative. Explain how you know.
    2. Fill in:   □×(−6)=42\;\square \times (-6) = 42□×(−6)=42.
    3. Fill in:   (−48)÷□=8\;(-48) \div \square = 8(−48)÷□=8.
    4. The product of three integers is −60-60−60. Two of them are −4-4−4 and 555. What is the third?

Challenge

Challenge section

These questions combine several ideas and are harder than the core Year 7 work. Skip if the core is still bedding in.

9. Order of operations with negatives

When an expression has several operations, use BIDMAS: brackets -> indices -> division & multiplication (left to right) -> addition & subtraction (left to right).

Left to right: the common trap

Division and multiplication are on the same level. Work them from left to right. The same rule applies to addition and subtraction.

12÷2×312 \div 2 \times 312÷2×3 equals 181818, not 222: first 12÷2=612 \div 2 = 612÷2=6, then 6×3=186 \times 3 = 186×3=18.

Worked example 6 Mixed operations with an index

Evaluate   −3+2×(−4)2−10÷(−5)\;-3 + 2 \times (-4)^2 - 10 \div (-5)−3+2×(−4)2−10÷(−5).

  1. Indices first: (−4)2=16(-4)^2 = 16(−4)2=16, so the expression becomes −3+2×16−10÷(−5)-3 + 2 \times 16 - 10 \div (-5)−3+2×16−10÷(−5).
  2. Multiplication and division, left to right: 2×16=322 \times 16 = 322×16=32; 10÷(−5)=−210 \div (-5) = -210÷(−5)=−2. The expression becomes −3+32−(−2)-3 + 32 - (-2)−3+32−(−2).
  3. Addition and subtraction, left to right: −3+32=29-3 + 32 = 29−3+32=29; 29−(−2)=29+2=3129 - (-2) = 29 + 2 = 3129−(−2)=29+2=31.
−3+2×(−4)2−10÷(−5)=31.-3 + 2 \times (-4)^2 - 10 \div (-5) = 31.−3+2×(−4)2−10÷(−5)=31.

10. (−5)2(-5)^2(−5)2 versus −52-5^2−52

A classic trap

(−5)2(-5)^2(−5)2 and −52-5^2−52 are not the same.

  • (−5)2=(−5)×(−5)=25(-5)^2 = (-5) \times (-5) = 25(−5)2=(−5)×(−5)=25. The brackets say “square the negative number”.
  • −52=−(5×5)=−25-5^2 = -(5 \times 5) = -25−52=−(5×5)=−25. With no brackets, the power applies only to the 555, and the minus sign sits in front.

Practice: Challenge

Reasoning

Harder reasoning

    1. Evaluate   (−3)3+5×(−2)2\;(-3)^3 + 5 \times (-2)^2(−3)3+5×(−2)2.
    2. Place <<<, >>> or === between the pair:   (−5)2  □  −52\;(-5)^2 \;\square\; -5^2(−5)2□−52. Justify your answer.
    3. Jamie writes "−32=9-3^2 = 9−32=9". Is Jamie correct? If not, what is the right answer and what mistake has Jamie made?
    4. Tom thinks of an integer. He doubles it, subtracts 777, then multiplies by −3-3−3. The result is 333333. What integer was Tom thinking of?

Check your integers

Quick check: pick an answer and the page will tell you right away. Your score stays on this device only.

0 / 5
  1. 1. Which is the smaller number?

    -5 sits further to the left on the number line, so it is the smaller number.

  2. 2. Work out 4 - (-7).

    Two negatives turn into a plus: 4 - (-7) = 4 + 7 = 11.

  3. 3. Work out -9 + 4.

    Start at -9, move 4 steps to the right: land on -5.

  4. 4. Which is correct?

    The brackets say 'square the negative number'. (-5) x (-5) = 25.

  5. 5. At midnight the temperature was -8 deg C. It rose 3 deg every hour for 6 hours. What was the temperature then?

    -8 + 6 x 3 = -8 + 18 = 10 deg C.

Year 7 Mathematics study companion | Practice