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Chapter 1 Place Value

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Page 1: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Chapter 1Place Value

Page 2: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction 1.2a Mix-N-Match Find all students who have the same

number represented on their card. There are groups of 3. Once you have found your group

PROVE they match by explaining to each other why your cards show the same number.

Page 3: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction 1.2a Let’s share what we noticed. Last year, you did a lot of work with place

value!! Turn and tell your elbow partner something

you learned in 3rd grade about place value. Today we are going to think of some pretty

large numbers. It can really help us to think about place value and how the places are related as we do this.

Our number system is called the base ten system.

Page 4: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction 1.2a

Page 5: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction 1.2a Think about the work you just did. Why

is our number system called a base ten system?

Look at your paper again. The last number we made was 1,000,

How many dots are on the whole page? Talk with your elbow partner and prove your answer.

How could we make a 1 hundred thousand?

Page 6: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2a Last year you learned how to write numbers in

standard from, expanded form, and word form.

4,285 This number is in standard form.

Standard form-when we only use digits-(no words or addition symbols).

Turn and tell your elbow partner how you know this is in standard form.

Page 7: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2a Write this number 4,285 in expanded form.

When you have it hold it up and show me. Check your elbow partners to see if you match.

4,000 + 200 + 80 + 5

If standard means only digits, how would you describe expanded form?

Expanded Form-An addition expression where each addend represents the value of one of the digits in the number.

Page 8: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2a Write this number 4,285 in word form. When

you have it hold it up and show me. Check your elbow partners to see if you match.

Four thousand, two hundred eighty five.

Word Form-the number is written in all words.

Page 9: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2a 700 + 50 + 3 What form is this number in? How do you know?

Turn and tell.

Standard Form=

Word Form=

Page 10: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2a Five thousand, five

What form is this number in? How do you know? Turn and tell.

Standard Form=

Expanded Form=

Page 11: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2aWe know three ways to write numbers. In your own words describe each of these forms to your elbow partner.

Standard Form=

Expanded Form=

Word Form

Page 12: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2a Some mathematicians use short word form.

Short Word Form- a short cut for word form using words and digits.

Look at these examples---What do you notice? Turn and talk.

4,285 = 4 thousand, 285 753 = 753 620 = 620 150,645,005 = 150 million, 645 thousand, 5 2, 049 = 2 thousand, 49 14 =14 12,893 = 12 thousand, 893 8,462,604 = 8 million, 462 thousand, 604

Page 13: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2aLet’s write this number in all four forms.

150,624

Expanded-

Word-

Short Word-

Check your thinking by looking in your Math book on page 6.

Page 14: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Guided Practice P. 6 and 7

Work with you elbow partner. Your partner picks the form you will write it in, that partner then coaches you, and checks your work. Then you switch and you pick the form for the next number, you’re the coach and you check the work.

# 5, 7, 9, 11, 12, 15

Page 15: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Independent Practice P. 6 and 7

Work with you elbow partner. Your partner picks the form you will write it in, that partner then coaches you, and checks your work. Then you switch and you pick the form for the next number, you’re the coach and you check the work.

# 5, 7, 9, 11, 12, 15

Page 16: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction 1.2b Quiz-Quiz-Trade Identify the number on the card and and tell if

you have any regrouping.

Was there anything tricky about this? Was there anything easy about this?

Page 17: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2b Yesterday we reviewed some

different ways to write numbers. Who can tell us one of the forms we know?

3,367 What form is this? Let’s write this in all the forms we

know.

Word Form

Expanded Form

Short Word Form

Page 18: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2b Let’s write some numbers in all the

forms we know.

Standard Form

Word Form

Expanded Form

Short Word Form

Check your thinking by looking on page 6 and use the Lesson Example Chart.

Page 19: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Guided Practice 1.2b We will work in groups of three. I will assign each group one problem from

p.21 #1-10 Each group member will write a different way

to represent the number shown. Group 1 #1. 59 thousand, 505 Student 1: Expanded Form Student 2: Standard Form Student 3: Word Form

Early Finishers can make up numbers in standard form and the group can write them in the three forms

Page 20: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2b I have a challenge for you! I am going to describe a

number, and I want you to see if you can figure out what it is. Let’s try one together.

I am thinking of a number that has three digits. The digits in my number are 3, 4, and 5. Talk with your group. Do you think we know enough to

build my number yet? What could my number be? What do we need to know? The four is in the hundreds place. Talk with your group.

What does that tell you about your number? Could my number be 354? Why or why not? Turn and talk.

In my number the value of the 3 is 30. Talk with your group. Do you think we know the number now?

What do you think the number is? How do you know?

Page 21: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Model 1.2b P. 21

#11

#12

Guided Practice # 13, 14, 17,18

Independent Practice #15, 16

Page 22: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction 1.2c Mix-N-Match

Find all other students who have the same number represented on their card, then prove your cards match by explaining to each other why their representations show the same number.

What was easy about this activity?

What was tricky?

Are their any tricks you use for short word form?

Page 23: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2c

Everyone think a moment about odd and even. Ask your neighbor something you know about odd and even. Turn and talk.

Share out. I heard some people say the digits 2,4,6,8 are

even. I’m going to put the ten frames for these numbers over here.

Page 24: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2c

What do you think when you hear the numbers 1,3, 5, 7, 9? Do you think even?

What do you notice about the even pile and the odd pile of ten frames? Turn and talk.

Page 25: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2c Let’s make a conjecture

about the number 0. Is it even or odd? How do you know?

Mathematicians consider the digit 0 an even number because you can make it into zero groups of two or two groups of zero.

There are never leftovers with the number zero.

Page 26: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.2c Are these numbers even or odd? How do

you know?

86,340 173,356 356

760 10,491 429.006

8,775 10,939 168,001

15,393 2,718 89,137

Page 27: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Independent Practice 1.2c

P. 20 #7, 14

Page 28: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson 1.4aIntroduction

Think about this model we built last week. What do these 10 pages represent? What

else can we see on these pages. Can you see any 100’s? How many? Can you see any 10’s? How many? Can you see any 1’s? How many? What number would be represented if I

made TEN of these 100,000? Turn and talk.

Page 29: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.4a Look at your HW

page. Read top

question. Work with your

group and use penny model to show how many pennies we have after one day.

How many pennies after 10 days?

Box 100 pennies. Check with neighbor.

Page 30: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.4a How many pennies

would we have after 100 days?

How can we figure that out using these penny models? Turn and talk.

Share. Do you have 100

tens? What expression

should we write to show 100 groups of 10?

That took up the whole page—Wow!!

Page 31: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development 1.4a How can we figure

out 1,000 days? Do we know how

many groups of 10 pennies we would have after 1,000 days?

Let’s write an expression to represent 1,000 groups of 10.

How could you use your papers to show this?

Will you have to have some help from other groups?

Page 32: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Guided Practice/Independent practice 1.4a

Work with your elbow partner to complete the second half of this chart.

Independent Practice

P. 15 #1 and 5.

Page 33: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson 1.4 B Introduction

Write this number in short word form. 200,000 + 30,000 + 400 + 50 +1

Write this number in standard form. Six hundred thirteen thousand, five hundred

twenty-one

Write this number in expanded form. 417,058

Write this number in word form. 137 thousand, 215

Page 34: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development1.4b

Let’s check your homework from yesterday.

Page 35: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development1.4b

The first equation is asking “How many hundreds are in a million?” So I need to think about how I write hundreds.

I know that when I write hundreds that there are always zeros in the tens and ones place.

Page 36: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development1.4b

The second equation is asking “How many thousands are in a million?” So I need to think about how I write thousands.

I know that when I write thousands that there are always zeros in the hundreds, tens, and ones place.

Page 37: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development1.4b

The third equation is asking “How many ten thousands are in a million?” So I need to think about how I write one ten thousand.

I know that when I write one ten thousand that there are always zeros in one thousands ,hundreds. tens and ones place.

Page 38: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development1.4b

The fourth equation is asking “How many hundred thousands are in a million?” So I need to think about how I write one hundred thousand.

I know that when I write one hundred thousand that there are always zeros in the ten thousands, one thousands, hundreds. tens and ones place.

Page 39: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development1.4b

The fifth equation is asking “How many millions are in a million?” So I need to think about how I write one hundred thousand.

I know that when I write one million that there are always zeros in the hundred thousand, ten thousands, one thousands,hundreds. tens and ones place.

Page 40: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Independent Practice1.4b P. 15

#6 and 7

Early Finishers Homework number 7

Page 41: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction1.5a We are going to

build the ones period.

This is a one. What comes

next? How are ones and tens related?

What comes next?

How are hundreds related to tens?

How many ones are in a hundred?

Page 42: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction1.5a How many tens

are in 1 hundred? How many ones

are in 1 ten? Everyone whisper

how many tens I will get if I break the hundred apart.

Page 43: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction1.5a We just built the

ones period. The ones period

includes the ones, tens, and hundreds.

How many places are in the ones period?

Tell you elbow partner that the ones period includes ones, tens, and hundreds.

Page 44: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction1.5a What happens if I

group 10 hundreds together?

What do you notice about a thousand block and a ones cube?

How are they the same?

How are they different?

How many ones are in 1 thousand?

Page 45: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction1.5a The 1 thousand is

the smallest place in the thousands period.

When I put 10 thousands together, I have the next place in the thousands period.

What place is that?

Page 46: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction1.5a This is a ten-

thousand and this is a ten.

What do you notice?

How are they the same?

How are they different?

How many tens are in ten thousand?

Page 47: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction1.5a What happens if I group

10, ten thousands together?

How many thousands are in one hundred thousand?

These places make up the thousands period.

Just like the ones period , the thousands period includes ones, tens and hundreds places.

How are the ones, tens, and hundreds in the thousands period different from the ones, tens, and hundreds in the ones period?

Page 48: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction1.5a We also have been

learning about millions. Just like the ones period

and the thousands period, our number system has a millions period.

The millions period has ones, tens, and hundreds.

Think about 1 million. If I drew a million cube I

would have to fit 1 million ones cubes inside.

Page 49: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Introduction1.5a Would I have enough

base ten blocks to build ten million?

How about 1 hundred million?

Turn your book to pages 7 and 8. We are going to review expanded form, standard form, word form and short word form.

Page 50: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development1.5a A few days ago, I showed you some examples of

numbers in short word form. Look at these examples again---What do you notice? Turn and talk.

4,285 = 4 thousand, 285 753 = 753 620 = 620 150,645,005 = 150 million, 645 thousand, 5 2, 049 = 2 thousand, 49 14 =14 12,893 = 12 thousand, 893 8,462,604 = 8 million, 462 thousand, 604

Page 51: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development1.5a Let’s try writing some greater numbers in all

four forms. 247, 856, 901

Expanded Form

Word Form

Short Word Form

Page 52: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Lesson Development1.5a Let’s try writing some greater numbers in all

four forms. 401, 424, 000

Expanded Form

Word Form

Short Word Form

Page 53: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Guided Practice1.5a P. 17-18 # 1, 4, 6, 17, 19, 33, 34, 35

Page 54: Chapter 1 Place Value. Introduction 1.2a  Mix-N-Match  Find all students who have the same number represented on their card.  There are groups of 3

Independent Practice1.5a Write this number in expanded form

5, 208, 042

Short word form

Word form