1 / 14

Thousandths

Thousandths. Lesson 4.7. Pop Quiz. Complete the addition and subtraction problems on the front. On the back the words below in numerical notation A. 5 tenths B. 6 tenths C. 2 & 3 tenths D. 7 hundredths E. 86 hundredths F. 4&13 hundredths G. 2 thousandths H. 35 thousandths

Download Presentation

Thousandths

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Thousandths Lesson 4.7

  2. Pop Quiz • Complete the addition and subtraction problems on the front. • On the back the words below in numerical notation A. 5 tenths B. 6 tenths C. 2 & 3 tenths D. 7 hundredths E. 86 hundredths F. 4&13 hundredths G. 2 thousandths H. 35 thousandths I. 563 thousandths

  3. Using Base-10 Blocks • This big cube=10 flats • Work with a buddy, show it on your desk by using ten flats • Since 1big cube = 10 flats, • 1 flat is 1/10 of the big cube • Since 1 flat= 10 longs, 1 big cube must have 10 times as many longs; • That is 100 longs, 1 long is 1/100 of a big cube

  4. Using Base - 10 Blocks • Open your journal to page 94. • Let’s use our base - 10 blocks to learn more. • Since 1 big cube = 100 longs, and 1 long= 10 cubes, 1 big cube must have 10*100 cubes • That is 1,000 cubes • 1 big cube = 1,000 • 1 cube is 1/1000 of a big cube

  5. Modeling Decimals with Base - 10 Blocks • Think of the big cube as ONE • Imagine you are going to trade 235 cubes for flats and longs so that you have as few base-10 blocks as possible. • How many flats would we have? • How many longs? • How many cubes would be left?

  6. Modeling Decimals with Base - 10 Blocks • If the big cube as ONE, then 235 cubes can be represented • by fraction 235/1,000 or • by decimal 0.235 is read as “235 thousandths”. • It can also be read “point two three five”

  7. 0.235 • The digit before the decimal names the big cubes, (Whole Numbers) • The first digit after the decimal names the number of flats, (Tenths) • The second digit after the decimal names the number of longs, (Hundredths) • The third digit after the decimal names the number of cubes, (Thousandths)

  8. Math Master 4-7 • Why must the decimal for a fraction 64/1,000 have a zero after the decimal point? • Why does the decimal for 8/1,000 have two zeros after the decimal point?

  9. Math Master 4-7 • If there are fewer than 1,000 cubes, is the fraction (and the equivalent decimal) less than or greater than 1? • How many cubes are needed to show a number that is at least one? • Using Base - 10 Block representation show 1,843 cubes • Write it in decimal form • Read it to your buddy

  10. Practice Reading Decimals • Say these decimals out loud • Read the whole number part • Say “and” • Read the digits after the decimal point as though they are a whole number. • Say “tenths”, “hundredths”, or “thousandths” as appropriate. 0.581 15.024 0.072 15.24 0.006 34.09 3.703

  11. Practice Writing Decimals • Name the decimal and write it on your white board 367 thousandths 3 thousandths 51 thousandths 5 and 79 hundredths 9 and 634 thousandths 7 and 8 tenths

  12. Independent Practice • Try it - Complete journal page 95. • Use fractions • Use decimals • Use Base - 10 Blocks • Check with a buddy when you finish

  13. Homework • Study Links 4.7 • Completing decimals similar to journal pages 94 and 95

  14. Centers • Math Boxes • Playing Base - 10 Exchange • Multiplication Baseball • Meet with the teacher • EDM games Online • First In Math

More Related