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4.NBT.A.2 NO PREP Math Game- Place Value War: Comparing Numbers

Rated 5 out of 5, based on 4 reviews
5.0 (4 ratings)
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Fun and Frazzled
74 Followers
Grade Levels
4th - 5th, Homeschool
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
Pages
56 pages
$3.00
$3.00
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Fun and Frazzled
74 Followers

What educators are saying

Used this as a center in math and students enjoyed it. Several have spent time playing it on their own. I only wish I had printed on cardstock and laminated so it would be sturdier.
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  1. Are you looking for print and go math games that your students can play to practice their place value skills, instead of boring worksheets? I love to use math games with my students to force some interaction on them so they can learn how to work with others. These games are good to use all year
    Price $10.80Original Price $12.00Save $1.20

Description

Are you looking for a game that your students can use to practice comparing numbers to 999,999 in standard, expanded, and word form? Well, this is a perfect game for you and them. I am using it in my math rotations and the students just love games to practice their skills. There are 108 playing cards and they can be used in a couple of ways to differentiate for your students. You can use half of the deck, which has 54 numbers in standard form, for the students to play War. To make it more challenging, you can use the other half of the deck that has numbers expressed in word and expanded form. Of course, you can elect to shuffle all the cards and have the students compare numbers in all three forms. This also gives students practice in reading the numbers and justifying how they know their number is the larger one. All you have to do is copy and cut the cards, and you are ready to go!

Total Pages
56 pages
Answer Key
N/A
Teaching Duration
N/A
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Read and write multi-digit whole numbers using base-ten numerals, number names, and expanded form. Compare two multi-digit numbers based on meanings of the digits in each place, using >, =, and < symbols to record the results of comparisons.

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74 Followers