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The purpose of this True or False is for students to consider the value of the same digit in different places. This reasoning will also be helpful later in this lesson when students describe the relationship between different places in multi-digit numbers.
In this activity, students have an opportunity to look for and make use of structure (MP7) as they use commutative and associative properties of addition to compose numbers and determine equivalent sums.
Decide if each statement is true or false. Explain your reasoning.
Focus question:
Card Sort Large Numbers Cards
In this activity, students sort a set of multi-digit numbers and describe the place-value relationships they notice in the sorted numbers. They analyze numbers that have the same digits and write the numbers in expanded form, highlighting the value of each digit. Students then describe relationships they see between the digits in each number.
For example, students may note that the value of the 2 in 46,200 is 200, in 462,000 it is 2,000, and that 2,000 is ten times as much as 200. In the Activity Synthesis, they learn that the observed relationship can be expressed with multiplication and division equations, such as , , or other equivalent equations.
When students sort the cards, they look for how the numbers are the same and different, including their overall value or the digits that make up the numbers (MP7).
Your teacher will give you a set of cards that show multi-digit numbers.
Write each number in expanded form.
In this activity, students read, write, and analyze multi-digit numbers and use expanded form to describe the relationship between the digits. The numbers in the activity are designed to highlight common errors in reading and writing large numbers. Students encounter numbers with the digit zero in the ten-thousands place and think about how to represent this in expanded and word forms.
Express each number in standard form, expanded form, and word form.
| number | expanded form | word form |
|---|---|---|
| 784,003 | ||
| eight hundred three thousand, ninety-nine | ||
| 310,060 | ||
| nine hundred thirty-four thousand, nine hundred |
Choose 2 numbers from the table to make this statement true:
The 3 in _______________ is ten times the value of the 3 in _______________.
Find 2 classmates who chose different numbers than you. Record their numbers. Take turns sharing your completed statements and explaining your reasoning.
The 3 in _______________ is ten times the value of the 3 in _______________.
The 3 in _______________ is ten times the value of the 3 in _______________.
“Today we described the relationship between the same digit in different places in multi-digit numbers.”
“Share with a partner something you learned about the relationship between digits from today’s lesson.” (I learned that a digit in the ten-thousand place is ten times the value of the same digit in the thousands place.)
Record students’ ideas using words and ask, “What equation could we write to show how many groups of 80,000 there are in 800,000?” ( or )
If students describe the relationship between digits only in terms of “more” or “less,” consider asking: