Arithmetic Properties Resources

Arithmetic Properties Resources

 

Arithmetic Properties Activities

Place Value Activity: Place value, reading, and comparing larger numbers stump many students. Grab this place value freebie to read more and learn a fool-proof method for helping your students overcome this hurdle. In addition to two pages of teacher tips and photographs, this file includes place value mats for numbers to the billions, number cards, a Think-Tac-Toe choice board, and a set of I Can cards for 6-, 9-, and 12-digit numbers.

Place Value Hundreds and Thousands Roll it! Make it! Expand it!: These are two easy and fun little games for your students to practice place value and expanded notation to the hundreds and again to the thousands. Use this along with my Place Value Feebie for Tens and Ones.

Place Value Rock: This can be used to help you students develop a strong understanding of place value. The pack has practice for tens and ones as well as hundreds.

Place Value Games: This packet includes Common Core-aligned place value math games for second grade, third grade, fourth grade, and fifth grade. Each place value math game includes a student record sheet, relevant Common Core nbt standards, directions, differentiation ideas, and higher-order thinking questions.

Operating with Whole Numbers: First use OPERATING WITH WHOLE NUMBERS for ordering and comparing whole numbers. Then OPERATING WITH WHOLE NUMBERS could be used to improve understanding of sums, differences, products, and quotients in various grade levels.

Commutative Property of Addition: This can be used as a center to help introduce to students what the commutative property of addition is. Students can fill in the missing numbers.

Addition/Subraction Properties QR Code Cards: Students work to solve addition and subtraction problems that have to do with estimating, solving larger addition/subtraction problems, and addition/subtraction properties. Once they solve the problem they check themselves using an ipad or iphone.

Order of Operations Interactive Math Notebook: Looking for a way to help your students remember AND organize order of operations? The hopscotch teaches the order, and the pizza slices show them how to organize their work.

Rational and Irrational Numbers Game: This is a brief, yet effective game to allow students to explore rational and irrational numbers. they roll the dice to create a fraction, and then determine if that number is rational or irrational.

Rational and Irrational Numbers Notes: This 2 page document includes a Do Now, Think-Pair-Share Activity, and Short Answer Questions for students to improve on their ability to answer a variety of types of questions regarding rational and irrational numbers.

Ordering Rational Numbers on a Number Line: A baseball themed activity great for math centers, review, tutoring or intervention.
Students will convert fractions and decimals and order on a number line.
Answer key and Recording sheet included.

Ordering and Comparing Rational Number Cards: A set of rational numbers to use for students to practice ordering and comparing rational numbers, classifying rational numbers, or converting between fractions, decimals, and percents.

Arithmetic Properties Worksheets, Assessments

Place Value Practice Numbers 11 to 29: Students use their knowledge of place value, ten frames, and counting skills to fill out these useful number sense worksheets.

Place Value Free – Place Value Worksheets and Place Value Cut and Paste: On these place value worksheets students represent the numbers in a variety of ways.
The numbers are written in word, colored in base 10 blocks, written as tens and ones or hundreds, tens and ones and more.

Decimals and Place Value Worksheet: Explore decimals and place value with this fantastic worksheet! This can be used as a brief assessment as well.

Addition and Subtraction of Integers and Rational Numbers Assessment: Apply properties of operations as strategies to add and subtract rational numbers.

Multi-Step Addition, Subtraction, and Multiplication Assessment: Use this document to assess my students’ abilities to recognize equations and strip diagrams as they relate to word problems as well as multiplication skills.

Commutative Property Practice Worksheet: This free download consists of 2 worksheets (front and back) to help practice the common core commutative property in both addition and subtraction. These problems do not include regrouping. Great to see whether your students can show their “math thinking” with this strategy!

Understand the Distributive property of division Worksheet: Distributive property of Division section of our 3rd grade math handout series!

Order of Operations Math Practice Christmas Color-by-Number: Order of Operations is the focus of this festive Christmas holiday color by number math practice sheet. The answer to the problem determines how the piece gets colored, and so a quick comparison to the answer key will tell you which students understand the rules of order of operations, and which are still struggling. Students will complete 28 math problems involving the four operations, a few with parentheses and a few with exponents; plus they get to color a picture, something most students enjoy.

Pre Algebra Rational Irrational Numbers Writing in Math: Know that numbers that are not rational are called irrational. Understand informally that every number has a decimal expansion; for rational numbers show that the decimal expansion repeats eventually, and convert a decimal expansion which repeats eventually into a rational number.

Exit Ticket Mini Quiz Set Rational Irrational Numbers Test Prep: Formative assessments are an excellent way to track students’ progress. These exit tickets/mini quizzes are aligned with the common core standards in mathematics. They can also be used as bell work or “do now” problems.

Rational and Irrational Number Sort: Students are given a selection of rational and irrational forms and numbers. Students will pull from the word bank and place in the correct bubble — rational or irrational. Great for introduction to rational and irrational numbers. Students can also create their own after sorting.

Rational and Irrational Numbers Exit Ticket: For use as a quick-check for student understanding on rational and irrational numbers. Requires students to label given numbers as rational and irrational and provide an explanation.

Rational and Irrational Numbers Worksheet: A worksheet/activity to help students determine between rational and irrational Numbers
Great tool to test their knowledge.
Two page worksheet with answer key.

Arithmetic Properties Teacher Manuals

Place Value Files – Identify & Name Place Value of Whole Numbers Hands On Lesson: Teaching place value? Here’s a hands-on lesson using manipulatives of your choice – paperclips, beans, cubes, etc, that lets you demonstrate how where numbers fall on a place value chart. Included with this activity is the teacher lesson plan, necessary place value chart – including smaller versions that can be placed in an Interactive Math Notebook, and three practice pages for naming standard form, expanded form, and word form of whole numbers.

Slideshow Place Value: This bundle includes supplemental materials that can be used for instruction with the Mathematics Curriculum: Second Grade lesson plans.

Intro to Whole Numbers: Review of properties of whole numbers. Includes answer key.

Order of Operations Math Tasks and Exit Tickets: This order of operations set is the perfect tool to teach your students the first Operations and Algebraic Thinking standard in the common core. By completing the activities in this set, your students will understand how to use parentheses, brackets, or braces in numerical expressions, and evaluate expressions with these symbols.

Notes for Rational and Irrational Numbers: I have included a set of the “teacher’s notes” that a teacher can use to review the lesson and also share on a class website with students who were absent the day of the lesson. This particular lesson gives a visual representation of the difference between rational and irrational numbers.

Arithmetic Properties Study Guides, Printables, Posters, Graphic Organizers

Place Value Anchor Posters: This is a set of 6 place value anchor chart posters. You will get 4 posters that are half a page each and 2 full page posters.
The small posters include:
*Place Value
*Standard Form
*Expanded Form
*Word Form
The larger posters include:
*Comparing Numbers
*Ordering Numbers

Printable Place Value Tools: This sweet freebie has lots of different tools for teaching and reinforcing basic place value concepts. It includes a set of printable base 10 blocks, several different place value strips, a set of number cards (includes commas & a decimal card), and a pocket for kids to put in their interactive notebooks to store their tools.

Properties of Addition Poster: These posters provide a brief explanation, nickname, and examples for commutative, identity, and associative properties of addition. They are great to hang up to serve as a remind to your kiddos. Mine still use them as a reference, although, we taught the unit months ago.

Properties of Addition Practice Cards: Use this math resource with your students to practice the Associative, Commutative, Zero or Identity Properties of Addition. Students will use clues to identify which property is used.

Properties of Addition and Multiplication Graphic Organizer: Use this chart to introduce the properties of addition and multiplication. We use the phrases and pictures as clues to help us remember the meaning of those “mathematician” words like commutative and associative.

Order of Operations – Math PEMDAS Printable Poster in A3 format: Printable poster showing the Order of Operations in Math.
This PDF contains 3 posters showing the math order of operations in a colorful and memorable format and includes:
– PEMDAS (or Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally)
– BEDMAS (for Canadian Students)
– BODMAS (for UK Students)

PEMDAS Order of Operations Math Bookmarks: The PEMDAS bookmarks are perfect for students learning about the order of operations. They can use the bookmark in class or at home. They can keep it in their math journal or folder, too. I had lots of success stapling a bookmark to their homework. It helped my students so much.