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Place Value, Hundreds, Tens and Ones - Worksheets (Up to 1000)

Rated 4.9 out of 5, based on 73 reviews
4.9 (73 ratings)
20,844 Downloads
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The 247 Printables
1.6k Followers
Grade Levels
2nd - 3rd, Homeschool
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
Pages
10 pages
The 247 Printables
1.6k Followers

Description

This package of no-prep worksheets "Place Value, Hundreds, Tens and Ones - up to 1000" is designed to make learning about place value fun and easy for 1st and 2nd-grade students. The worksheets cover all the essential place value concepts, from base ten blocks and hundreds, tens, and ones charts to expanded form, values of digits, and mixed review. 

The package provides a variety of place value activities to engage students in learning, such as Roll 2 dice, color the little box, and Color by number. Each sheet comes with cute illustrations that help to make learning about the value of numbers more enjoyable for students.

 The worksheets are designed to enable students to practice placing values of numbers within hundreds, tens, and ones up to 1000. By using this package, teachers can help their students build a strong foundation in place value concepts.

Through different activities, your kid will be able to get a deep understanding of the value of a certain number in hundreds, tens and ones

These place value worksheets are great to used for the whole groups, small groups, morning work, homework, review/intervention

Take a peek at the preview to see all the fun inside!

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

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Understand that the three digits of a three-digit number represent amounts of hundreds, tens, and ones; e.g., 706 equals 7 hundreds, 0 tens, and 6 ones. Understand the following as special cases:
100 can be thought of as a bundle of ten tens - called a “hundred.”
The numbers 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900 refer to one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, or nine hundreds (and 0 tens and 0 ones).
Count within 1000; skip-count by 5s, 10s, and 100s.
Read and write numbers to 1000 using base-ten numerals, number names, and expanded form.

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