Sunday, March 15, 2020
Understanding Place Value, Basic Math Concepts
Understanding Place Value, Basic Math Concepts Place value is an extremely important concept that is taught as early as kindergarten. As students learn about larger numbers, the concept of place value continues throughout the middle grades. Place value refers to the value of the digit based on its position and can be a difficultà concept for young learners toà grasp, but understanding this idea is essential for learning math. What Is Place Value? Place value refers to the value of each digit in a number. For example, the numberà 753 has three places- or columns- each with a specific value. In this three-digit number, theà 3à is in the ones place, theà 5à is in the tens place, and the 7à is in the hundreds place.à In other words, theà 3à represents three single units, so the value of this number isà three. Theà 5à is in the tens place, where values increase by multiples of 10. So, theà 5à is worth five units of 10, orà 5 x 10, which equals 50. Theà 7à is in the hundreds place, so it represents seven units of 100, or 700. Young learners grapple with this idea because the value of each number is different depending on the column, or place, in which it resides. Lisa Shumate, writing for the website of Demme Learning, an educational publishing company, explains: Regardless of whether dad is in the kitchen, the living room, or the garage, he is still dad, but if the digità 3à is in different locations (tens or hundreds place, for example), it means something different. Aà 3à in the ones column is justà 3.à But that sameà 3à in the tens column isà 3 x 10, or 30, and theà 3à in the hundreds column isà 3 x 100, or 300. To teach place value, give students the tools they need to grasp this concept. Base 10 Blocks Base 10 blocks areà manipulative sets designed toà help students learn place value with blocks and flats in various colors, such as small yellow or green cubes (for ones), blue rods (for tens), and orange flatsà (featuring 100-block squares). For example, consider a number such asà 294.à Use green cubes for ones, blue bars (which contain 10 blocks each) to represent 10s, and 100 flats for the hundreds place. Count out four green cubes representing theà 4à in the ones column, nine blue bars (containing 10 units each) to represent theà 9à in the tens column, and two 100 flats to represent theà 2à in the hundreds column. You dont even have to use different-colored base 10 blocks. For example,à for the number 142, you would place one 100 flat in the hundreds place, four 10-unit rods in the tens column, and two single-unit cubes in the ones place. Place Value Charts Use a chart likeà an imageà atop this article when teaching place value to students. Explain to them that with this kind of chart, they can determine place values for even very large numbers. For instance, with a number such as 360,521: theà 3à would be placed in the Hundreds of Thousands column and represents 300,000 (3 x 100,000); theà 6à would be placed in the Tens of Thousands column and represents 60,000 (6 x 10,000); theà 0 would be placed in the Thousands column and represents zero (0 x 1,000); the à 5à would be placed in the Hundreds column and represents 500 (5 x 100); theà 2à would be placed in the Tens column and represents 20 (2 x 10), and the one would be in the Units- or ones- column and represents 1 (1 x 1). Using Objects Make copies of the chart. Give students various numbers up to 999,999 and have them placeà the correct digit in its corresponding column. Alternatively, use different-colored objects, such as gummy bears, cubes, wrapped candies, or even small squares of paper. Define what each color represents, such as green for ones, yellow for tens, red for hundreds, and brown for thousands. Write a number, such as 1,345, on the board. Each student should place the correct number of colored objects in the corresponding columns on her chart: one brown marker in the Thousands column, three red markers in the Hundreds column, four yellow markers in the Tens column, and five green markers in the Ones column. Rounding Numbers When a child understands place value, she is usually able to round numbers to a specific place. The key is understanding that rounding numbers are essentially the same as rounding digits. The general rule is that if a digit is five or greater, you round up. If a digit is four or less, you round down. So, to round the number 387 to the nearest tens place, for example, you would look at the number in the ones column, which isà 7.à Since seven is greater than five, it rounds up to 10. You cant have a 10 in the ones place, so you would leave the zero in the ones place and round the number in the tens place,à 8, up to the next digit, which is 9. The number rounded to the nearest 10 would be 390. If students are struggling to round in this manner, review place value as discussed previously.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.