Time conversion worksheet for students to practice unit conversions.
A worksheet with 20 fill-in-the-blank questions about time conversions, including seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, and years, with spaces for name, teacher, score, and date at the top.
PNG
612×792
5.1 KB
Free · Personal Use
Quality Assured by Worksheets Library Team
Reviewed for educational accuracy and age-appropriateness
ID: #498021
⭐
Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Time Worksheets | Time Worksheets for Learning to Tell Time
▼
Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Time Worksheets | Time Worksheets for Learning to Tell Time
Explanation:
Let’s go through each question one by one, using basic time conversions. Remember these key facts:
- 60 seconds = 1 minute
- 60 minutes = 1 hour
- 24 hours = 1 day
- 7 days = 1 week
- 12 months = 1 year
- 365 days ≈ 1 year (we’ll use 365 unless told otherwise)
- 52 weeks ≈ 1 year (again, standard approximation)
Now solve each blank:
1) 60 ______ = 1 Hour
→ 60 minutes = 1 hour → minutes
2) ______ Seconds = 1 Minute
→ 60 seconds = 1 minute → 60
3) 1 Minute = 60 ______
→ 1 minute = 60 seconds → seconds
4) 12 ______ = 1 Year
→ 12 months = 1 year → months
5) 60 ______ = 1 Minute
→ 60 seconds = 1 minute → seconds
6) 7 ______ = 1 Week
→ 7 days = 1 week → days
7) 60 Seconds = 1 ______
→ 60 seconds = 1 minute → minute
8) 7 Days = ______ Week
→ 7 days = 1 week → 1
9) 12 Months = ______ Year
→ 12 months = 1 year → 1
10) 365 Days = ______ Year
→ 365 days = 1 year → 1
11) ______ Minute = 60 Seconds
→ 1 minute = 60 seconds → 1
12) 52 Weeks = 1 ______
→ 52 weeks = 1 year → year
13) 15 Minutes = ______ Hour
→ 15 ÷ 60 = 0.25 hour → but since it's likely expecting a fraction: 15/60 = 1/4 → ¼ or 0.25 — but in elementary worksheets, they often write as fraction or decimal? Let's check pattern: most blanks expect unit names or whole numbers. Wait — look at #19: “60 ______ = 1 Minute” → expects “seconds”, not number. So here, it's asking for how many *hours*? The blank is after the equals sign? No — read carefully:
13) 15 Minutes = ______ Hour
→ So blank is before "Hour", meaning: how many hours? Answer: ¼ or 0.25, but since other answers are integers or unit words, maybe they expect fraction? However, in many grade-level worksheets, they accept “1/4”. But let’s hold and check others.
Wait — actually, looking again at format: In #1, it's “60 ______ = 1 Hour” → blank is unit (minutes). In #13: “15 Minutes = ______ Hour” → blank is a number (how many hours), because “Hour” is singular and already given. Same with #15: “7 Days = ______ Week” → answer is 1 (a number). So yes, blanks can be numbers or units depending on position.
So:
13) 15 minutes = ? hour → 15/60 = 1/4 → ¼ or 0.25. Since it's a math worksheet likely for younger students, they may prefer fraction: 1/4
But let’s keep consistency — check #20: “60 Minutes = ______ Hour” → clearly 1. So #13 should be 1/4.
However, some worksheets avoid fractions and use decimals — but since no decimals appear elsewhere, and 1/4 is standard, we’ll use 1/4.
14) 1 Minute = 60 ______
→ seconds → seconds
15) 7 Days = ______ Week
→ 1 → 1
16) 12 Months = 1 ______
→ year → year
17) ______ Seconds = 1 Minute
→ 60 → 60
18) 12 Months = ______ Year
→ 1 → 1
19) 60 ______ = 1 Minute
→ seconds → seconds
20) 60 Minutes = ______ Hour
→ 1 → 1
Let me double-check all:
1) minutes
2) 60
3) seconds
4) months
5) seconds
6) days
7) minute
8) 1
9) 1
10) 1
11) 1
12) year
13) 1/4
14) seconds
15) 1
16) year
17) 60
18) 1
19) seconds
20) 1
Yes — all consistent.
One more check: #13 — if they expect a decimal, it's 0.25, but since the worksheet uses whole numbers elsewhere and fractions are common in time conversion (e.g., quarter hour), 1/4 is appropriate. If the worksheet expects only whole numbers, maybe they made a mistake — but 15 minutes is famously a quarter hour, so 1/4 is correct.
Final Answer:
1) minutes
2) 60
3) seconds
4) months
5) seconds
6) days
7) minute
8) 1
9) 1
10) 1
11) 1
12) year
13) 1/4
14) seconds
15) 1
16) year
17) 60
18) 1
19) seconds
20) 1
Let’s go through each question one by one, using basic time conversions. Remember these key facts:
- 60 seconds = 1 minute
- 60 minutes = 1 hour
- 24 hours = 1 day
- 7 days = 1 week
- 12 months = 1 year
- 365 days ≈ 1 year (we’ll use 365 unless told otherwise)
- 52 weeks ≈ 1 year (again, standard approximation)
Now solve each blank:
1) 60 ______ = 1 Hour
→ 60 minutes = 1 hour → minutes
2) ______ Seconds = 1 Minute
→ 60 seconds = 1 minute → 60
3) 1 Minute = 60 ______
→ 1 minute = 60 seconds → seconds
4) 12 ______ = 1 Year
→ 12 months = 1 year → months
5) 60 ______ = 1 Minute
→ 60 seconds = 1 minute → seconds
6) 7 ______ = 1 Week
→ 7 days = 1 week → days
7) 60 Seconds = 1 ______
→ 60 seconds = 1 minute → minute
8) 7 Days = ______ Week
→ 7 days = 1 week → 1
9) 12 Months = ______ Year
→ 12 months = 1 year → 1
10) 365 Days = ______ Year
→ 365 days = 1 year → 1
11) ______ Minute = 60 Seconds
→ 1 minute = 60 seconds → 1
12) 52 Weeks = 1 ______
→ 52 weeks = 1 year → year
13) 15 Minutes = ______ Hour
→ 15 ÷ 60 = 0.25 hour → but since it's likely expecting a fraction: 15/60 = 1/4 → ¼ or 0.25 — but in elementary worksheets, they often write as fraction or decimal? Let's check pattern: most blanks expect unit names or whole numbers. Wait — look at #19: “60 ______ = 1 Minute” → expects “seconds”, not number. So here, it's asking for how many *hours*? The blank is after the equals sign? No — read carefully:
13) 15 Minutes = ______ Hour
→ So blank is before "Hour", meaning: how many hours? Answer: ¼ or 0.25, but since other answers are integers or unit words, maybe they expect fraction? However, in many grade-level worksheets, they accept “1/4”. But let’s hold and check others.
Wait — actually, looking again at format: In #1, it's “60 ______ = 1 Hour” → blank is unit (minutes). In #13: “15 Minutes = ______ Hour” → blank is a number (how many hours), because “Hour” is singular and already given. Same with #15: “7 Days = ______ Week” → answer is 1 (a number). So yes, blanks can be numbers or units depending on position.
So:
13) 15 minutes = ? hour → 15/60 = 1/4 → ¼ or 0.25. Since it's a math worksheet likely for younger students, they may prefer fraction: 1/4
But let’s keep consistency — check #20: “60 Minutes = ______ Hour” → clearly 1. So #13 should be 1/4.
However, some worksheets avoid fractions and use decimals — but since no decimals appear elsewhere, and 1/4 is standard, we’ll use 1/4.
14) 1 Minute = 60 ______
→ seconds → seconds
15) 7 Days = ______ Week
→ 1 → 1
16) 12 Months = 1 ______
→ year → year
17) ______ Seconds = 1 Minute
→ 60 → 60
18) 12 Months = ______ Year
→ 1 → 1
19) 60 ______ = 1 Minute
→ seconds → seconds
20) 60 Minutes = ______ Hour
→ 1 → 1
Let me double-check all:
1) minutes
2) 60
3) seconds
4) months
5) seconds
6) days
7) minute
8) 1
9) 1
10) 1
11) 1
12) year
13) 1/4
14) seconds
15) 1
16) year
17) 60
18) 1
19) seconds
20) 1
Yes — all consistent.
One more check: #13 — if they expect a decimal, it's 0.25, but since the worksheet uses whole numbers elsewhere and fractions are common in time conversion (e.g., quarter hour), 1/4 is appropriate. If the worksheet expects only whole numbers, maybe they made a mistake — but 15 minutes is famously a quarter hour, so 1/4 is correct.
Final Answer:
1) minutes
2) 60
3) seconds
4) months
5) seconds
6) days
7) minute
8) 1
9) 1
10) 1
11) 1
12) year
13) 1/4
14) seconds
15) 1
16) year
17) 60
18) 1
19) seconds
20) 1
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of time worksheet class 2.