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Place Value PowerPoint Lesson with Practice Exercises for 4th grade

Rated 4.87 out of 5, based on 590 reviews
4.9 (590 ratings)
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Deb Hanson
46.6k Followers
Grade Levels
4th - 5th, Homeschool
Standards
Formats Included
  • Zip
Pages
66 slides and a companion handout
$6.00
$6.00
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Deb Hanson
46.6k Followers

What educators are saying

This was very helpful when I was teaching my kiddos with learning disabilities place value at the beginning of the school year!
Very easy to use in the classroom and adaptable to multiple grade levels, thank you so much for this incredible resource!

Description

Are you looking for an organized PowerPoint to use to introduce your students to common fourth-grade place value concepts? If so, this highly interactive 74-slide PowerPoint may be exactly what you are looking for! It includes digits from the ones column to the hundred-millions column. This PowerPoint can be broken down and used over the course of 5 days! Each section contains practice problems.

It addresses the following concepts:

→ Models

→ Place Value Charts (ones to hundred-millions)

→ Standard Form, Word Form, and Expanded Form

→ Comparing Numbers

→ Ordering Numbers

PowerPoints filled with visuals are ideal for teaching new content to students because PowerPoints tend to be highly engaging and concepts can be easily broken down into understandable chunks of information. But let's face it... they are so time-consuming to create! Fortunately, now you have an option of using one that is already complete, kid-tested, and ready to go for you!

HERE'S THE SEQUENCE OF TOPICS COVERED IN THIS POWERPOINT:

Slides 1-4: Introduction to Place Value

Slides 5-7: Base-Ten Block Models

Slides 8-17: Place Value Charts & Value of Digits

Slides 18-30: Word Form (writing the word form when given the standard form and vice versa)

Slides 31-46: Expanded Form (writing the expanded form when given the standard form and vice versa)

***I also included 5 slides about writing the expanded form with parentheses. If you do not teach this type of expanded form, you can delete these four slides.***

Slides 47-56: Comparing Numbers (>, <, =)

Slides 57-74: Ordering Numbers (least to greatest & vice versa)

Check out the PREVIEW!

Here's what teachers like you have to say about this place value PowerPoint:

⭐️ Ms. Rodriguez said, "This was an amazing resource that completely aligned with the standard we are teaching in the class! My students LOVED it!"

⭐️ Karen L. said, "I own several of these now and they never disappoint! Concepts covered are spot on and delivered in such a kid-friendly way. I always appreciate the guided notes that come with it, so helpful for students to follow along."

⭐️ Erica T. said, "I could cry tears of joy with how wonderful and exceptional this presentation was. It lasted almost an entire week, with students becoming so proficient in place value that they aced their test. Thank you so much for the practical questions for students to get practice in, as well as for setting up the PowerPoint in a common-sense manner. So incredible!"

⭐️ Fabulous in 4th said, "This PowerPoint is a MUST HAVE! I love how engaging, visually appealing, and informative it is. It is a great introduction lesson."

Copyright by Deb Hanson

This item is a paid digital download from my TpT store

www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Deb-Hanson

This product is to be used by the original downloader only. Copying for more than one teacher is prohibited. This item is also bound by copyright laws. Redistributing, editing, selling, or posting this item (or any part thereof) on an Internet site that is not password protected are all strictly prohibited without first gaining permission from the author. Violations are subject to the penalties of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Please contact me if you wish to be granted special permissions!

Total Pages
66 slides and a companion handout
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
90 minutes
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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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46.6k Followers