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Year 4 Tenths on a place value chart Easy
The worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
In this foundation worksheet, children recognise and write decimal equivalents of any number of tenths.
It is important that they understand that 10 tenths are equivalent to 1 whole, and therefore 1 whole is equivalent to 10 tenths. Use this knowledge when counting both forwards and backwards in tenths. When counting forwards, you should be aware that 1 comes after 0.9, and when counting backwards that 0.9 comes after 1. Links can be made to the equivalence of 10 ones and 1 ten to support understanding.
You might like to use these supporting sentences:
There are _____tenths in 1 whole.
1 whole is equivalent to _____ tenths.
There is/are _________ whole/wholes and ____ tenths
The number is _____.

Tenths as Decimals Easy
The worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
This is reasoning activity targeted at lower ability Year 4. The number line in this question is a visual resource to support the understanding of decimal numbers.
Before children attempt this worksheet, they should encounter, practice writing and reading decimal numbers and the decimal point, model making, drawing and showing that the decimal point is used to separate whole numbers from decimals in the main worksheet displayed on the website.
Children look at a variety of representations of tenths as decimals on the number line. This leads to representing the tenths in the bar models and finally in the place value charts.
The place value chart shows how tenths fit with the rest of the number system and to understand the need for the decimal point.
Watch for:
Children may forget to include the decimal point.
Children may confuse the words “tens” and “tenths”.
You might ask them:
"If a whole is split into 10 equal parts, then what is each part worth?
"If a whole is split into 10 equal parts, then what are the three parts worth?

Decimals up to 2 decimal places Easy
The worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
This worksheet uses a hundred piece of base 10 as 1 whole.
It shows children that they can exchange, for example, 10 tenths for 1 whole, or 10 hundredths for
1 tenth. A hundred square where each part represents 1 hundredth, or 0.01, can also help children to see the relationship between a hundredth, a tenth and a whole.
They use place value counters to represent decimal number.
Ask, “How can you represent this number using a place value chart?”
“What is the value of the digit ____ in the number ____?”
You can use this supporting sentence to help your child.
________tenths are equivalent to ______ whole.
________ hundredths are equivalent to ________ tenths.
________hundredths are equivalent to ______ whole.
When reading or writing a number, children may say “one point fourteen"
instead of “one point one four”.
• When there are hundredths and tenths but no ones in a number, children may forget to include the zero placeholder in the ones column.

Decimals up to two decimal places Easy
The worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
In this reasoning worksheet children are supported to describe the value of each digit in
the decimal numbers.
Children read and write the numbers using place value counters in a place value chart, as well as working out the value of each digit in the number.
Children use place value counters to represent decimal number.
Ask, “What is the value of the digit ____ in the number ____?”
You can use this supporting sentence to help your child.
________tenths are equivalent to ______ whole.
________ hundredths are equivalent to ________ tenths.
________hundredths are equivalent to ______ whole.
When reading or writing a number, children may say “one point fourteen"
instead of “one point one four”.
• When there are hundredths and tenths but no ones in a number, children may forget to include the zero placeholder in the ones column.

Rounding Numbers to the nearest 10, 100 or 1,000 Easy
The worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
In this worksheet, children build on their knowledge of rounding
to the nearest 10, 100 and 1,000.
It is important that children hear and use the language of
“rounding to the nearest” rather than “rounding up” and
“rounding down”, as this can lead to errors.
Number lines are a particularly useful tool to support this, as children can see which multiples of 10, 100 or 1,000 the given numbers are closer to.
When there is a 5 in the relevant place value column, despite being exactly
halfway between the two multiples, we round to the next one.
Watch for :
The language “round down”/”round up” and so round 62,180 to 61,000 (or
61,180) when asked to round to the nearest 1,000.
Ask:
“Which multiples of 10, 100, 1,000 does the number lie between?”
" Which multiple on the number line is the number closer to?"
" What is the number rounded to the nearest 10, 100, 1,000?"

Year 4 Tenths place value Easy
The worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
In this foundation reasoning worksheet, children explore the smallest and the greatest decimal numbers. They can use the number cards and the place value chart to solve the question.
Children recognise and write decimal equivalents of any number of tenths.
It is important that they understand that 10 tenths are equivalent to 1 whole, and therefore 1 whole is equivalent to 10 tenths. Use this knowledge when counting both forwards and backwards in tenths. When counting forwards, you should be aware that 1 comes after 0.9, and when counting backwards that 0.9 comes after 1. Links can be made to the equivalence of 10 ones and 1 ten to support understanding.
You might like to use these supporting sentences to extend their learning:
There are _____tenths in 1 whole.
1 whole is equivalent to _____ tenths.
There is/are _________ whole/wholes and ____ tenths
The number is _____.

Powers of 10 Easy
The worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.In this worksheet, children develop their understanding of place value by exploring the relationship between numbers in different columns. As well as adjacent columns, they look at columns that are further apart, for example considering the number of tens needed to make 2,000 and then multiples of 2,000. Children can use both place value charts and charts to support their understanding. Exchanging with place value counters as extra support is also helpful.
Ask,
“How can you tell if a number is a power of 10?”
“Is this number a multiple of a power of 10?” “How can you tell?”
Watch for:
Children may not realise that the overall effect of,
for example, × 10 followed by × 10 is × 100.

Comparing and Ordering Fractions Easy
The worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.Building on their knowledge of equivalent fractions, in this worksheet children compare fractions where the denominators are multiples of the other.
Diagrams will help children to see which is the larger fraction and they should continue to use fraction walls and bar models until they are confident with the general rules.
Answer sheet included.
Bundle

Multiples of 3 with increased challenges
These are three differentiated worksheets.
Recall multiplication and division facts for multiplication tables up to 12 × 12.
Recognise and use factor pairs and commutativity in mental calculations.
The worksheets increase in challenge.
The Foundation worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
The Core worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The Higher worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
Watch for:
Children may think that any number with 3 ones is a multiple of 3.
An early mistake when counting in 3s will affect all subsequent multiples.
Children may always begin counting from 3 to find a larger multiple of 3, when they could use the multiples they already know to find the new information.
In the higher ability worksheet ( with three faces), children explore how to recognise if a number is a multiple of 3 by finding its digit sum: if the sum of the digits of a number is a multiple of 3, then the number itself is also a multiple of 3.
Challenge by asking :
How do you find the digit sum of a number?
How can you tell if a number is a multiple of 3?
Are the multiples of 3 odd or even?
In the foundation worksheet (one face), children explore the link between counting in 3s and the
3 times-table to understand multiples of 3 in a range of contexts.
They use number tracks and hundred squares to represent multiples of 3.
Ask:
What is the next multiple of 3?
What is the multiple of 3 before?
How many 3s are there in?
Bundle

Comparing and Ordering Fractions with increased challenges
In these three worksheets, children build on their knowledge of ordering a set of three or more fractions.
The worksheets increase in challenge.
The Foundation worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
The Core worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The Higher worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
If equivalent fractions are needed, then one denominator will be a multiple of the other or others.
Bar models, fraction walls and number lines will still be useful to help children to see the relative sizes of the fractions, especially when conversions are needed.
Children should look at the set of fractions as a whole before deciding their approach, as comparing numerators could still be a better strategy for some sets of fractions.
Bundle

Add and Subtract Fractions with increased challenges
Use these worksheets to help children develop their understanding of adding and subtracting fractions with the same denominator, and
denominators that are multiples of the same number.
The first worksheet is aimed at those working below age expected.
The second worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The third worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
This worksheet includes a challenge to help deepen children’s understanding and problem-solving skills.
Answer sheets attached.
Bundle

Lond Division with Remainders with increased challenges
There are two worksheets featuring long division pf 4-digit numbers by 2-digit numbers.
The first worksheet is aimed at those working age expected.
The second worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
Bundle

Partitioning Numbers to 1,000,000 with increased challenges
The worksheets increase in challenge.
The Foundation worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
The Core worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The Higher worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
In these worksheets, children deal with larger numbers while consolidating their understanding of the place value columns.
They partition numbers in the standard way (for example,
into thousands, hundreds, tens and ones) as well as in more
flexible ways (for example, 16,875 = 14,875 + 2,000 and
15,875 = 12,475 + 3,400).
Watch for:
Children may make mistakes with the order of the digits
when partitioning/recombining numbers with many digits.
Bundle

Adding and Subtracting Mental strategies with increased challenges
Add and subtract numbers mentally with increasingly large numbers.
The worksheets increase in challenge.
The Foundation worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
The Core worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The Higher worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
In these worksheets, children recap and build on their learning from
previous years to mentally calculate sums and differences using
partitioning.
They use their knowledge of number bonds and place
value to add and subtract multiples of powers of 10.
If they know that 3 + 4 = 7, then 3 thousand + 4 thousand = 7 thousand
and 3,000 + 4,000 = 7,000.
Children need to be fluent in their knowledge of number
bonds to support the mental strategies.
How does knowing that 6 + 3 = 9 help you to work out 60,000 + 30,000?
“How can the numbers be partitioned to help add/subtract them?”
"Are any of the numbers multiples of powers of 10? "
“How does this help you to add/subtract them?”
Bundle

Decimals reasoning with increased challenges
Includes:
Support mat
divide 1 digit number by 10
decimals as tenths - Foundation , core and higher
tenths on a place value chart - Foundation , core and higher
with extra 7 reasoning sheets
The worksheets increase in challenge.
The Foundation worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
The Core worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The Higher worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
Model making, drawing and writing decimal numbers, showing that the decimal point is used to separate whole numbers from decimals.
Children look at a variety of representations of tenths as decimals, up to the value of 1 whole.
This leads to adding the tenths column to a place value chart for children to see how tenths fit with the rest of the number system and to understand the need for the decimal point.
Children may forget to include the decimal point.
If the number of tenths reaches 10, children may call this “zero point ten” and write 0.10 rather than exchanging for 1 one.
Children may confuse the words “tens” and “tenths”.
Questions to help with understaning the topic:
If a whole is divided into 10 equal parts, what is the value of each part?
How can you represent the decimal
How are decimals like fractions? using a model?
How can you convert between tenths as fractions and tenths as decimals?
How is 1/10 like 0.1? How is it different?
Bundle

Rounding numbers with increased challenges
The worksheets increase in challenge.
The Foundation worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
The Core worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The Higher worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
The focus is on rounding numbers to the nearest 10, 100 or 1,000.
It is important that children hear and use the language of
“rounding to the nearest” rather than “rounding up” and
“rounding down”, as this can lead to errors.
Number lines are a particularly useful tool to support this, as children can see which multiples of 10, 100 or 1,000 the given numbers are closer to.
When there is a 5 in the relevant place value column, despite being exactly
halfway between the two multiples, we round to the next one.
Watch for :
The language “round down”/”round up” and so round 62,180 to 61,000 (or
61,180) when asked to round to the nearest 1,000.
Bundle

Adding two 4-digit numbers with increased challenges
The worksheets increase in challenge.
The Foundation worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
The Core worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The Higher worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
Children add two 4-digit
numbers with one exchange in any column.
The numbers can be made using place value counters in a place value chart, alongside the formal written method.
When discussing where to start an addition, it
is important to use language such as begin from the “smallest
value column” rather than the “ones column” to avoid any
misconceptions when decimals are introduced later in the year.
After each column is added, ask,
“Do you have enough ones/ tens/hundreds to make an exchange?"
This question will be an important one in this worksheet , as the children do not know which column will be the one where an exchange is needed.
Extra reasoning activity sheets
Bundle

Place Value Numbers to 100,000 with increased challenges
The worksheets increase in challenge.
The Foundation worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
The Core worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The Higher worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
In these worksheets, children explore numbers up to 100,000. They are introduced to the ten-thousands column in a place value chart and begin to understand the multiples of 10,000. This can be reinforced using a number line to 100,000.
Both place value counters and plain counters are used in place value charts, allowing for discussion about the values of the columns.
Bundle

Adding and Subtracting 1s, 10s, 100s, and 1,000s with increased challenges
These are differentiated worksheets to support and challenge adding and subtracting 1s , 10s , 100s and 1,000 from any number.
The worksheets increase in challenge.
The Foundation worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
The Core worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The Higher worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
Bundle

Order and Compare Fractions with increased challenges
The worksheets increase in challenge.
The Foundation worksheet is aimed at those working towards age expected.
The Core worksheet is aimed at those working at age expected.
The Higher worksheet is aimed at those working at greater depth.
In these well differentiated worksheets, children order a set of two or more fractions. If equivalent fractions are needed, then one denominator will be a multiple of the other(s) so that conversions will not be complicated.
Compare fractions
Order fractions less than 1
Extra reasoning sheets attached
Bar models, fraction walls and number lines are used to help children to see the relative sizes of the fractions, especially when conversions are needed. Children should look at the set of numerators especially when the denominators are the same.
At first, children may need support to decide the best strategy when there are more than two fractions.
Children may not look at both parts of the fractions when making their decisions about the order.
Useful supporting sentences for parents.
When fractions have the same denominator, the one with the_____ numerator is the greatest fraction.
When fractions have the same numerator, the one with the ______ denominator is the greatest fraction.
Key questions for parents:
If a set of fractions all have the same denominator, how can you tell which is greatest?
If a set of fractions all have the same numerator, how can you tell which is greatest?