In this lesson:
By the end of this lesson, you will:
You already know how to round whole numbers:
Today we do the exact same thing with decimals.
Rounding a decimal to a given place means:
This is the same logic you used for whole numbers.
2.36 is 6 hundredths above 2.3 and 4 hundredths below 2.4, so it rounds to 2.4.
What if a number is exactly halfway?
The "round up at 5" rule handles the tie, not a deep math fact.
Round 5.8 to the nearest one.
Think for a moment before the next slide...
5.8 is between 5 and 6
So 5.8 rounds to 6.
Drawing a number line works, but it is slow. There is a shortcut:
Let us learn the shortcut and see why it works.
Step 1: Circle the target digit (the rounding place)
Step 2: Underline the decision digit (one place right)
Step 3: Decide:
Drop all digits after the target place.
Round 8.5274 to three different places:
Same procedure, different position.
Round 6.98 to the nearest tenth.
Write 7.0, not just 7 — the zero shows you rounded to tenths.
Circle the target, underline the decision digit, then decide.
Did you catch the rollovers in problems 3 and 4?
2.449 is 0.049 above 2.4 and 0.051 below 2.5 — it rounds to 2.4, not 2.5.
Cascading mistake: round the 9 to get 2.45, then round the 5 to get 2.5.
Why it fails: you changed the number before rounding.
Correct rule:
Round 7.3451 to the nearest tenth:
Round 12.6448 to the nearest hundredth:
In both cases, the digits further right do not change the decision.
Different situations need different precision:
The context tells you which place to round to.
Watch for cascading traps and rollovers!
One look, one decision, every time.
Now that you can round decimals to any place, you will use this skill to:
Rounding is your go-to tool for quick number sense.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Use place value understanding to round decimals to any place