Place Value Variants of Written and Expanded Form Worksheets Posted

by Dad on Worksheets

By special request, variants of the written and expanded form worksheets have been added that express the component parts of numbers using a format like the following…

1,234 = (1,000 x 1) + (100 x 2) + (10 x 3) +4

You can find new worksheets translating both whole numbers and numbers with decimal parts into and out of this format at the links below…

Write Numbers in Expanded Place Value Form

Write Expanded Place Value Form in Standard Form

4 Comments »

  1. Great site!! These are great for my daughter to practice with!

    I am wondering if there is any way to print out the set of addition worksheets all at once? I’d appreciate any help!!

    Thanks!!

    Comment by Grace — November 11, 2009 @ 1:27 pm

  2. Hi Grace -

    Thanks for your comments!

    Unfortunately, the worksheets are all on their own static page, so there isn’t a one-button way to print out multiple worksheets at a time. Your best bet is just to get used to the navigation and printing buttons on the pages, which is exactly what I do here when printing a batch of work for my daughter… You should find getting multiple different sheets out goes pretty quick once you go through it a few times.

    Dad

    Comment by Dad — November 11, 2009 @ 1:42 pm

  3. Your worksheets aren’t accurate. You are asking 4 divided by 7 and 4 divided by 5. Your daughters must be geniuses to do that in their head on a timed trial

    Comment by Aurora — November 21, 2009 @ 12:59 pm

  4. Hi Aurora -

    The RocketMath math series for division includes the facts for problems for divisors greater than the dividend as being memorized as having an answer of zero… I agree this is confusing because the answer should be a fraction less than zero, but it’s part of the math fact programs that many schools are using.

    I’ve actually created a parallel set of worksheets that avoids this kink. You can find a complete description of all the various division worksheets at the post here…

    http://www.dadsworksheets.com/2009/08/09/a-guide-to-the-division-fact-worksheets/

    …and I point out, given a choice, that you should probably avoid the other series of worksheets and focus on the “whole” division math facts until you actual introduce division with remainders.

    As far as memorization goes, my 4th grader is doing timed tests for single digit division with real remainders (problems like 4/5 = 0r4 and 7/5 = 1r2) and doing well with that… I’ll pass along that you were impressed! :-)

    Thanks for visiting!

    Dad

    Comment by Dad — November 21, 2009 @ 2:20 pm

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