Not all roles available for this page.
Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
In this activity, students approach 10,000 by counting up in different ways. Each count ends by reaching 10,000. Students count by different amounts and describe patterns and relationships between numbers. The activity is designed to highlight familiar counting patterns as a way to support naming and writing multi-digit numbers. The final questions in the task ask students to consider the magnitude of each number in relation to 10,000.
When students count by large numbers and examine the counted numbers, they observe patterns in how the different digits in the numbers change (MP7).
Record each count in the given spaces. The first number has been recorded for you.
Count by 1,000
5,000 , _____________, _____________, _____________, _____________, _____________
Count by 100
9,500 , _____________, _____________, _____________, _____________, _____________
Count by 10
9,950 , _____________, _____________, _____________, _____________, _____________
Count by 1
9,995, _____________, _____________, _____________, _____________, _____________
Complete each statement:
In this activity, students work within 100,000 and determine how many thousands and ten-thousands are in each number. When students use strategies that are based on place value they are looking for and making use of structure (MP7).
Complete the table to show how many thousands are in each number. In the last row, write your own five-digit number.
| number | number of thousands |
name in words | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10,000 | 10 | ten thousand | |
| 20,000 | |||
| 90,000 | |||
| 11,000 | |||
| 27,000 | |||
| 98,000 | |||
With your partner, name each number in words. Leave the last column blank for now.
In the top (header) row of the last column, write “number of ten thousands.” Complete the table to show how many ten thousands are in each number.
Here are 4 numbers.
20,500
51,300
82,050
5,970
“Today we worked with numbers that have ten-thousands. We identified thousands and ten-thousands in numbers.”
Write 68,100 for all students to see. Recite the number chorally to practice reading numbers.
“How can we tell the number of thousands in a number?” (We can count by 1,000 to the number, build or draw the number using thousands, or look at the digits in the thousands place of the number.)
“How do we determine the number of ten-thousands in a number?” (We can count by 10,000 to the number, sketch a diagram to represent the number, or look at the digit in the ten-thousands place.)