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Place Value Interactive Math Notebook for 2nd grade
Place Value Interactive Math Notebook for 2nd grade
Place Value Interactive Math Notebook for 2nd grade
Place Value Interactive Math Notebook for 2nd grade
Place Value Interactive Math Notebook for 2nd grade
Place Value Interactive Math Notebook for 2nd grade
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Place Value Interactive Math Notebook for 2nd grade
Place Value Interactive Math Notebook for 2nd grade
Place Value Interactive Math Notebook for 2nd grade
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What others say

"I teach middle school special education and always looking for new resources to help my students. This was a great one! It truly helped. "
star
Abigail M.
"My kiddos love these interactive notebooks. Great for whole-group lessons or independent center work! I have also used small group instruction "
star
Michelle A.

Description

My students and I love this resource!! Such a great, fun way to keep students engaged. The interactive notebooks are amazing! They are thorough and allow for differentiation. I highly recommend! - Ana G.

This is my all-time favorite resource! My students look forward to completing their interactive notebook each day. Parents love that they can actually see what they students can do. I have lots of students who hold on to their completed notebooks and use them in later grades because they are THAT awesome and helpful! Highly recommend! - Joy B.


“I’m not good at math.”

“Math is hard.”

“Math is so boring.”

“I hate math.”


Have you heard this litany of complaints in your classroom? If you’re like most teachers, you probably have. The truth is many kids don’t like math. In fact, one study reported that more than half of all students ranked math as their least favorite subject. 


If you’re like me, this makes your inner math-geek sob. And even if you don’t have an inner math geek (at least not one you are willing to acknowledge), I know you. I know you want to engage your students in math. You want them to see that math can be fascinating and fun! 


You stay awake at night, tossing and turning, wondering how to make numbers more exciting and abstract concepts more concrete. And you’ve got the bags under your eyes to prove it. Or maybe that was just me? (Don’t worry, with your impeccable make-up skills no one is the wiser.) 


Well, you can toss that concealer in the trash because your sleepless nights are over! I have the perfect solution for your math class woes: Interactive Notebooks!


Interactive Notebooks are a FUN way to teach and practice math! Why? With traditional note-taking, students focus on copying notes from the teacher rather than understanding the material they’re writing down. Interactive Notebooks are different. They require students to interact with (hey-o!) and think about the material. 


They are a collection of notes and hands-on activities all bundled into one notebook. The best part is that students LOVE making them and don't even realize they are learning!


Interactive Notebooks are truly interactive. Students practice important math skills by  inserting and moving around flaps, foldables, wheels, charts, etc.  My students used to call them “scrapbooks”! They love all of the different kinds of activities and multiple modalities help visual and kinesthetic learners.


Interactive notebooks honestly transformed the way I taught because they make it so easy to assess students’ mastery of a topic.


Each notebook provides a great reference for review. Your kids will love looking back at the notebooks they created when it comes time for testing.


And the best part? I designed these for busy teachers like you. So the cuts are super-simple, and there’s no unnecessary coloring. Your kids can quickly cut, glue, and go! If you’ve got kiddos who really want to color you can allow it as a fast finisher activity.

This interactive notebook covers place value skills. Multiple versions of most activities allows for differentiation. Students can practice the same skill, but at their independent level.

I have included 13 different activities, and they all have multiple versions!


What’s Included:

Thirteen different activities

  • Place Value Strips
  • Convert Between Place Value Flaps
  • Base Ten Flaps
  • Hundreds, Tens, and Ones Flaps
  • Expanded Form Flaps
  • Word Form Flaps
  • Roll-It Flaps (two-digit and three-digit numbers)
  • Roll-It Flaps (four-digit numbers)
  • Value of a Number Flaps
  • Place Value Puzzles
  • Making New Number Flaps
  • Less Than or Greater Than Flaps
  • Skip Counting Flaps

Detailed teacher directions 

A picture of each completed activity.


Please see the preview for pictures of some of the activities.


How to Use in the Classroom:

You can use these Interactive Notebooks in a variety of ways. Here are some ideas to inspire you:

•Copy notebooks on different colored paper. This keeps kids interested and makes organization simple.

•Guided math groups: Use during meet the teacher time to review and reteach concepts in small groups. Help your student complete activities on their level.

•Math centers: Place in a center for use during math workshop. Students can complete Interactive notebooks independently during a math center while you work with a small group. This is a great option if you don’t have access to technology.

•Whole group: Select an activity and model how to solve the problems. Project an activity on the whiteboard and work through examples together. Or let students complete independently and share with a partner before you discuss as a class. Use as a whole group activity to reinforce new skills

•Assessment: Easily assess student mastery of skills by reviewing their Interactive Notebooks


**Would you like some tips for using these interactive notebooks in your classroom? Click HERE to view a free video with tips for implementing these interactive notebooks.**

You might like some of my other Math Interactive Notebooks:

Addition Without Regrouping

Addition With Regrouping


You might also like:
Tools for Interactive Notebooks

Math Center Bundle for 2nd Grade

*****************************

FAQs


Q: Do you have Interactive Notebooks for other grade levels?

A: We have interactive notebooks for second grade, third grade, and fourth grade.


Q: How can you use these as an assessment tool?

A: Two suggestions for using the Interactive Notebooks as assessments are to do a quick check for mastery as students are completing the activity, or at the end of a unit using a rubric to score it.  The time frame would depend on how you move through the skills.


Q: Do you usually just print these on colored paper? Or colored card stock?

A: Yes, colored paper works great! It makes them fun to look at, and nice and easy to see since they are gluing it in their notebooks.


Q: Are these interactive notebooks included in the 2nd-grade math centers bundle?

A: No, the math centers bundle and the interactive notebook bundle are two separate products.


Q: If we used all of the interactive notebook pages, would they fit in one composition notebook for the year? Would there still be room for work, or just the notebook pages?  Thanks!

A: Yes. There still should be room for work.


Q: How often do you use the interactive notebook each week? 

A: I used my interactive notebooks during my math small groups. We would use them once every week or two.


Q: Hi! Are these Common Core aligned? Thanks!

A: The activities cover just about every common core standard, but they do not have standards listed on the activities.

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Place Value Interactive Math Notebook for 2nd grade

Not So Wimpy Teacher
102.1k Followers
$5.50

Highlights

Digital downloads
Subjects icon
Subjects
Standards icon
Standards
Pages
61
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
2 Weeks

What others say

"I teach middle school special education and always looking for new resources to help my students. This was a great one! It truly helped. "
star
Abigail M.
"My kiddos love these interactive notebooks. Great for whole-group lessons or independent center work! I have also used small group instruction "
star
Michelle A.

Save even more with bundles

My students and I love this resource!! Such a great, fun way to keep students engaged. The interactive notebooks are amazing! They are thorough and allow for differentiation. I highly recommend! - Ana G.This is my all-time favorite resource! My students look forward to completing their interactive n
Price $45.00Original Price $50.00Save $5.00
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Description

My students and I love this resource!! Such a great, fun way to keep students engaged. The interactive notebooks are amazing! They are thorough and allow for differentiation. I highly recommend! - Ana G.

This is my all-time favorite resource! My students look forward to completing their interactive notebook each day. Parents love that they can actually see what they students can do. I have lots of students who hold on to their completed notebooks and use them in later grades because they are THAT awesome and helpful! Highly recommend! - Joy B.


“I’m not good at math.”

“Math is hard.”

“Math is so boring.”

“I hate math.”


Have you heard this litany of complaints in your classroom? If you’re like most teachers, you probably have. The truth is many kids don’t like math. In fact, one study reported that more than half of all students ranked math as their least favorite subject. 


If you’re like me, this makes your inner math-geek sob. And even if you don’t have an inner math geek (at least not one you are willing to acknowledge), I know you. I know you want to engage your students in math. You want them to see that math can be fascinating and fun! 


You stay awake at night, tossing and turning, wondering how to make numbers more exciting and abstract concepts more concrete. And you’ve got the bags under your eyes to prove it. Or maybe that was just me? (Don’t worry, with your impeccable make-up skills no one is the wiser.) 


Well, you can toss that concealer in the trash because your sleepless nights are over! I have the perfect solution for your math class woes: Interactive Notebooks!


Interactive Notebooks are a FUN way to teach and practice math! Why? With traditional note-taking, students focus on copying notes from the teacher rather than understanding the material they’re writing down. Interactive Notebooks are different. They require students to interact with (hey-o!) and think about the material. 


They are a collection of notes and hands-on activities all bundled into one notebook. The best part is that students LOVE making them and don't even realize they are learning!


Interactive Notebooks are truly interactive. Students practice important math skills by  inserting and moving around flaps, foldables, wheels, charts, etc.  My students used to call them “scrapbooks”! They love all of the different kinds of activities and multiple modalities help visual and kinesthetic learners.


Interactive notebooks honestly transformed the way I taught because they make it so easy to assess students’ mastery of a topic.


Each notebook provides a great reference for review. Your kids will love looking back at the notebooks they created when it comes time for testing.


And the best part? I designed these for busy teachers like you. So the cuts are super-simple, and there’s no unnecessary coloring. Your kids can quickly cut, glue, and go! If you’ve got kiddos who really want to color you can allow it as a fast finisher activity.

This interactive notebook covers place value skills. Multiple versions of most activities allows for differentiation. Students can practice the same skill, but at their independent level.

I have included 13 different activities, and they all have multiple versions!


What’s Included:

Thirteen different activities

  • Place Value Strips
  • Convert Between Place Value Flaps
  • Base Ten Flaps
  • Hundreds, Tens, and Ones Flaps
  • Expanded Form Flaps
  • Word Form Flaps
  • Roll-It Flaps (two-digit and three-digit numbers)
  • Roll-It Flaps (four-digit numbers)
  • Value of a Number Flaps
  • Place Value Puzzles
  • Making New Number Flaps
  • Less Than or Greater Than Flaps
  • Skip Counting Flaps

Detailed teacher directions 

A picture of each completed activity.


Please see the preview for pictures of some of the activities.


How to Use in the Classroom:

You can use these Interactive Notebooks in a variety of ways. Here are some ideas to inspire you:

•Copy notebooks on different colored paper. This keeps kids interested and makes organization simple.

•Guided math groups: Use during meet the teacher time to review and reteach concepts in small groups. Help your student complete activities on their level.

•Math centers: Place in a center for use during math workshop. Students can complete Interactive notebooks independently during a math center while you work with a small group. This is a great option if you don’t have access to technology.

•Whole group: Select an activity and model how to solve the problems. Project an activity on the whiteboard and work through examples together. Or let students complete independently and share with a partner before you discuss as a class. Use as a whole group activity to reinforce new skills

•Assessment: Easily assess student mastery of skills by reviewing their Interactive Notebooks


**Would you like some tips for using these interactive notebooks in your classroom? Click HERE to view a free video with tips for implementing these interactive notebooks.**

You might like some of my other Math Interactive Notebooks:

Addition Without Regrouping

Addition With Regrouping


You might also like:
Tools for Interactive Notebooks

Math Center Bundle for 2nd Grade

*****************************

FAQs


Q: Do you have Interactive Notebooks for other grade levels?

A: We have interactive notebooks for second grade, third grade, and fourth grade.


Q: How can you use these as an assessment tool?

A: Two suggestions for using the Interactive Notebooks as assessments are to do a quick check for mastery as students are completing the activity, or at the end of a unit using a rubric to score it.  The time frame would depend on how you move through the skills.


Q: Do you usually just print these on colored paper? Or colored card stock?

A: Yes, colored paper works great! It makes them fun to look at, and nice and easy to see since they are gluing it in their notebooks.


Q: Are these interactive notebooks included in the 2nd-grade math centers bundle?

A: No, the math centers bundle and the interactive notebook bundle are two separate products.


Q: If we used all of the interactive notebook pages, would they fit in one composition notebook for the year? Would there still be room for work, or just the notebook pages?  Thanks!

A: Yes. There still should be room for work.


Q: How often do you use the interactive notebook each week? 

A: I used my interactive notebooks during my math small groups. We would use them once every week or two.


Q: Hi! Are these Common Core aligned? Thanks!

A: The activities cover just about every common core standard, but they do not have standards listed on the activities.

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Reviews

4.9
Rated 4.89 out of 5, based on 28 reviews
28
ratings
5
25
4
3
3
0
2
0
1
0
Mostly used with 2nd grade
Reviews
2
2
3
21
7
1
PreK
K
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
All verified TPT purchases
Awesome Resource
Rated 5 out of 5
February 5, 2026
This product was incredibly helpful in making a challenging concept clear and engaging for my third graders. The activities were easy to use, developmentally appropriate, and kept students actively involved in their learning. I saw a noticeable boost in understanding and confidence as students applied the concept independently.
rebecca G.
1,506 reviews • New Jersey
Grades taught: 3rd
A well-crafted resource
Rated 5 out of 5
September 18, 2025
Met expectations
Great value
Standards-aligned
This is a great math resource and has helped in my classroom tremendously.
Tabatha H.
487 reviews • Alabama
Grades taught: 2nd
Not So Wimpy Teacher
Response from
Not So Wimpy Teacher
(TPT Seller)
Sep 18, 2025

I'm happy to hear this! Thank you for your feedback.

Great resource
Rated 5 out of 5
September 14, 2025
It's an engaging resource for learning about place value
Alyssa Nelson
(TPT Seller)
245 reviews • Georgia
Grades taught: PreK, K, 1st, 2nd
Great resource for interactive learning
Rated 5 out of 5
September 4, 2025
I teach middle school special education and always looking for new resources to help my students. This was a great one! It truly helped.
Abigail M.
34 reviews
Grades taught: PreK, K, 1st, 2nd
Student populations: Mild to severe disabilities
Best Interactive Notebooks
Rated 5 out of 5
August 8, 2025
Met expectations
Great value
Standards-aligned
My kiddos love these interactive notebooks. Great for whole-group lessons or independent center work! I have also used small group instruction
Michelle A.
552 reviews • Pennsylvania
Grades taught: 2nd
Not So Wimpy Teacher
Response from
Not So Wimpy Teacher
(TPT Seller)
Aug 10, 2025

I'm happy to hear this! Thank you for your feedback.

Rated 5 out of 5
May 4, 2025
Brilliant resource. Not only are the activities clean and crisp, the title pages and explanations of each topic is amazing!
Classroom Capers AU
(TPT Seller)
236 reviews
Grades taught: 2nd, 3rd
Not So Wimpy Teacher
Response from
Not So Wimpy Teacher
(TPT Seller)
May 5, 2025

I'm glad you are happy with the resource. Thank you for your feedback.

Rated 5 out of 5
December 4, 2024
Its hard to find notebook work for 2nd grade so I was happy to see this
Kaylen T.
78 reviews
Grades taught: 2nd
Rated 5 out of 5
September 21, 2024
A great way to keep my kinesthetic learners engaged. I love all the Not So Wimpy products.
Kristi R.
67 reviews
Grades taught: 2nd

Questions & Answers

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Understand that the three digits of a three-digit number represent amounts of hundreds, tens, and ones; e.g., 706 equals 7 hundreds, 0 tens, and 6 ones. Understand the following as special cases:
100 can be thought of as a bundle of ten tens - called a “hundred.”
The numbers 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900 refer to one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, or nine hundreds (and 0 tens and 0 ones).
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