Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Understanding Place Value Relationships

Times 10 and Divided by 10

In this lesson:

  • Every place is exactly 10 times the place to its right
  • Every place is 1/10 of the place to its left
  • This pattern works the same way everywhere - including decimals
Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:

  1. Explain that each place in a multi-digit number is 10 times the value of the place to its right
  2. Explain that each place in a multi-digit number is 1/10 the value of the place to its left
  3. Identify the value of a digit in any place from thousands to thousandths and relate it to the same digit in neighboring places
  4. Predict how a digit's value changes when it shifts one or more places to the left or right
  5. Apply the times-10 and divide-by-10 relationships to connect whole number place value to decimal place value
Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Review: What You Already Know

From Grade 4, you learned:

  • A digit in the tens place represents 10 times what it represents in the ones place
  • A digit in the hundreds place represents 10 times what it represents in the tens place

Example: In the number 333:

  • The first 3 is worth 300 (hundreds)
  • The second 3 is worth 30 (tens) - that's 10 times 3
  • The third 3 is worth 3 (ones)

Today: We'll extend this pattern in both directions!

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

The Pattern Going Left: Times 10

Place value chart showing 444,444

Every time we move one place left, the value is 10 times as much:

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

The "Times 10" Relationship Is Exact

  • Not "bigger" or "the next place" - it's exactly 10 times
  • Not addition (10 more) - it's multiplication (10 times as much)

Key phrase: "10 times as much"

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Example: Comparing the Same Digit in Different Places

In the number 6,364, the digit 6 appears twice:

  • The 6 in the thousands place is worth 6,000
  • The 6 in the tens place is worth 60

Question: How many times as much is 6,000 compared to 60?

Answer: - so 6,000 is 100 times 60

Why? We moved 2 places to the left, and

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Check

Imagine we extended the place value chart one more place to the left of hundred thousands.

What would that place be called?

What would the digit 4 be worth in that place?

Think for a moment before the next slide...

Answer: The place is millions. The digit 4 would be worth 4,000,000 (four million) - because it's 10 times 400,000.

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

The Universal Rule: Every Place Is 10 Times the Place to Its Right

This pattern is always true:

  • No matter how large the number
  • No matter which places you're comparing
  • The factor is always exactly 10 for adjacent places

Moving left = multiplying by 10

This is not just a fact about specific places - it's the structure of base ten.

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Your Turn

Given the number 88,808:

  1. What is the value of the 8 in the ten thousands place?
  2. What is the value of the 8 in the hundreds place?
  3. How many times as much is the first 8 compared to the second 8?

Pause and try before the next slide

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Answers:

  1. (eighty thousand)
  2. (eight hundred)
  3. - the first 8 is 100 times the second 8
Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Moving Right: What About the Other Direction?

We just saw that moving left means times 10.

Question: What happens when we move right?

If moving left multiplies by 10, then moving right must...

...divide by 10!

Or we can say: moving right gives us 1/10 of the value.

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

The Pattern Going Right: Divide by 10

Place value chart showing ÷10 going right

Every time we move one place right, the value is 1/10 of what it was:

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

"1/10 of" Means Divide by 10

Fraction language: "One tenth of 400 means one out of ten equal parts of 400"

Division language:

These are two ways of saying the same thing:

  • Finding 1/10 of a number
  • Dividing by 10
Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

What Happens If We Keep Going Right?

We've reached the ones place: the digit 4 is worth 4.

The pivotal question: What if we move one more place to the right?

What is 1/10 of 4?

This is where the pattern extends into decimals...

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

The Pattern Continues: Into Decimals

Extended place value chart showing 4 → 0.4 → 0.04

The same pattern - divide by 10 - works across the decimal point!

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Visual: Understanding 1/10 of 4

One whole partitioned into ten slices, 4 highlighted

  • Take 1 whole unit and partition it into 10 equal slices
  • Each slice is 1/10 (one tenth), written as 0.1
  • 4 slices = 4 tenths = 0.4

So:

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Check: Divide by 10

  1. What is 1/10 of 300?
  2. What is 1/10 of 50?
  3. What is 1/10 of 7?

Pause and try each one

Answers:

  1. (seven tenths)
Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Putting It All Together: Both Directions

Complete place value chart: 2,222.222

  • Left arrow (→): times 10
  • Right arrow (←): divide by 10
Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

The Pattern Doesn't Break at the Decimal Point

Moving left = ×10 (everywhere - whole numbers AND decimals)
Moving right = ÷10 (everywhere - whole numbers AND decimals)

Examples across the decimal point:

  • - ones is 10 times tenths
  • - tenths is 10 times hundredths
  • - hundredths is 1/10 of tenths

The decimal point is a marker, not a wall.

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Comparing Non-Adjacent Places

In the number 2,222.222, compare these two 2s:

  • The 2 in the hundreds place is worth 200
  • The 2 in the tenths place is worth 0.2

Question: How many times as much is 200 compared to 0.2?

Answer: We moved 3 places to the left.

So is 1,000 times

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Real-World Connection: Money

Dollar bill, dime, penny with ×10 and ÷10 relationships

The same pattern:

  • 1 dollar = 10 dimes (dime is 1/10 of a dollar)
  • 1 dime = 10 pennies (penny is 1/10 of a dime)

Times 10 and divide by 10 show up everywhere!

Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Key Takeaways

Every place is 10 times the place to its right (moving left = ×10)
Every place is 1/10 of the place to its left (moving right = ÷10)
This pattern works everywhere - whole numbers AND decimals
The decimal point is a marker, not a wall - the pattern continues seamlessly

⚠️ Watch out:

  • The pattern doesn't stop at ones - it continues into decimals
  • Place value is about "times," not "plus" (10 times, not 10 more)
  • The pattern doesn't change at the decimal point - same rule applies
  • Left = times 10 (bigger), Right = divide by 10 (smaller)
Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1
Understanding Place Value Relationships | Lesson 1 of 1

Coming Up Next

Now that you understand place value relationships, you're ready for:

5.NBT.A.3: Reading and writing decimals to thousandths using base-ten numerals, number names, and expanded form

You'll use today's times-10 and divide-by-10 understanding to:

  • Read decimal numbers correctly
  • Write decimals in expanded form
  • Compare and order decimals
Grade 5 Mathematics | 5.NBT.A.1

Click to begin the narrated lesson

Recognize that in a multi-digit number, a digit in one place represents 10 times as much as it represents in the place to its right