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Place Value Math Project for 2nd and 3rd Grade - Run a Candy Store | PBL
Place Value Math Project for 2nd and 3rd Grade - Run a Candy Store | PBL
Place Value Math Project for 2nd and 3rd Grade - Run a Candy Store | PBL
Place Value Math Project for 2nd and 3rd Grade - Run a Candy Store | PBL
Place Value Math Project for 2nd and 3rd Grade - Run a Candy Store | PBL
Place Value Math Project for 2nd and 3rd Grade - Run a Candy Store | PBL
Place Value Math Project for 2nd and 3rd Grade - Run a Candy Store | PBL
Place Value Math Project for 2nd and 3rd Grade - Run a Candy Store | PBL
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What others say

"This is a great resource! I used this for review and my students were very engaged with the activities ."
star
Nicole E.
"I love this resource for my pre-k classroom. It is great in every way. I would definitely purchase it again. Thank you so much! "
star
Lyndsey J.

Description

Are you looking for a way to reinforce place value concepts in an engaging way that helps your students make connections? “Run a Candy Store” is a real-life math project where students will complete eleven different place value tasks.

You might choose to print specific tasks to use during Math centers, or you might make a booklet out of all of the tasks and let your students choose which one to do when. The choice is yours.

Take a look at what you’ll find inside this math project:

TASK #1: THE PLAN

You can’t believe it! Your family is buying a candy store and YOU get to help run it! Let’s think of a name for the candy store and design a poster to advertise.

TASK#2: STOCKING THE SHELVES

Your first shipment has come in and it’s your job to stock the shelves with candy! Figure out how many of each candy was ordered.

Skills: place value chart, comparing and ordering

TASK#3: SURVEY YOUR CUSTOMERS

You decide to survey 100 kids in your school to see what kind of candy is their favorite. Interpret the graph and represent the candy with base 10 blocks.

Skills: skip-counting, base 10 blocks, graphing and data interpretation, addition, subtraction

TASK #4: THE GRAND OPENING

It’s time for the Grand Opening Event at your candy store! You have lots of fun things planned for the day. First up, spin the wheel to see what each person wins! Next, guess the number of candies in the jar!

Skills: base 10 blocks, expanded form, comparing and ordering, addition, subtraction, number words

TASK #5: THE MYSTERY GUEST

You are SO excited about the mystery guest who is handing out candy at the Grand Opening! Use the place value clues to shade the picture and discover who the mystery guest is!

Skills: tens and ones

TASK#6: THE FIRST BIG ORDER

You just got your first big customer order! Let’s take a look at the graphs to see what she would like!

Skills: skip-counting, picture graphs, data interpretation, addition

TASK#7: INVENTORY DAY

Inventory is important when you own a business! This means that we count all of the candies to see what we have available.

Skills: number words, expanded form, comparing and ordering, adding multiples of 10 and 100

TASK #8: SURPRISE BAGS

You decide to make up some surprise bags to sell! Inside each surprise bag will be a variety of candy.

Skills: skip-counting, addition

TASK #9: WORKING THE CASH REGISTER

Working at the cash register is an important job at the candy store! Figure out how much each person’s candy will cost.

Skills: skip-counting, addition, money

TASK#10: CANDY SPILL!

Oh no! The gumball machine fell over and ALL of the gumballs fell. Out! As you clean up the gumball mess, you count each color of gumball.

Skills: skip-counting, number words, addition

TASK#11: GUMMY SALES

Gummy bears and gummy fish have been the most popular candies at the store so far. Interpret the tally charts to show how many packages have sold this week.

Skills: addition, tens and ones

*

*

WAYS TO USE MATH PROJECTS IN YOUR CLASSROOM:

Math projects are an ideal way to consolidate learning. I recommend using them as an engaging activity AFTER skills have been learned rather than during learning. You will likely find that engagement is very high and that your students ask to do more of these!

There are many ways to use math projects in your classroom. Some of the most popular are:

•a small-group or pairs activity

•a guided math activity to allow you to see where your students are struggling

•a fun, rewarding way to engage your early finishers

•a low-prep, easy-to-implement activity for a substitute teacher

Enjoy!

Shelley Gray

www.ShelleyGrayTeaching.com

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 Math Project for 2nd and 3rd Grade - Run a Candy Store | PBL

Shelley Gray
28.2k Followers
$4.75

Highlights

Digital downloads
Subjects icon
Subjects
Standards icon
Standards
Pages
28
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
1 Week

What others say

"This is a great resource! I used this for review and my students were very engaged with the activities ."
star
Nicole E.
"I love this resource for my pre-k classroom. It is great in every way. I would definitely purchase it again. Thank you so much! "
star
Lyndsey J.

Save even more with bundles

Ready to infuse real-life experience into your Math class? Math projects are a great way to do just that!This is a bundle of TEN Math Projects and Escape Rooms: Run a Candy Store (place value to 100)The Camping Trip (addition and subtraction to 100)Run a Pizza Place (fractions)Back In Time (to the O
Price $39.75Original Price $48.25Save $8.50
10
Would you like to have access to ALL of the Math Projects and Escape Rooms that I create?I will be continuing to add projects to this growing bundle as I post them. All curriculum will continue to be 2nd-5th grade focused. Owning this membership access ensures that you have the material to challenge
Price $179.00Original Price $244.45Save $65.45
48
Would you like to have access to ALL of the Math Projects that I create?This membership currently includes 37 math projects, spanning from 2nd grade to 5th grade curriculum (some can be used for 6th). As I create more projects, they will be added to this bundle.Purchasing this membership bundle ensu
Price $105.00Original Price $178.00Save $73.00
37

Description

Are you looking for a way to reinforce place value concepts in an engaging way that helps your students make connections? “Run a Candy Store” is a real-life math project where students will complete eleven different place value tasks.

You might choose to print specific tasks to use during Math centers, or you might make a booklet out of all of the tasks and let your students choose which one to do when. The choice is yours.

Take a look at what you’ll find inside this math project:

TASK #1: THE PLAN

You can’t believe it! Your family is buying a candy store and YOU get to help run it! Let’s think of a name for the candy store and design a poster to advertise.

TASK#2: STOCKING THE SHELVES

Your first shipment has come in and it’s your job to stock the shelves with candy! Figure out how many of each candy was ordered.

Skills: place value chart, comparing and ordering

TASK#3: SURVEY YOUR CUSTOMERS

You decide to survey 100 kids in your school to see what kind of candy is their favorite. Interpret the graph and represent the candy with base 10 blocks.

Skills: skip-counting, base 10 blocks, graphing and data interpretation, addition, subtraction

TASK #4: THE GRAND OPENING

It’s time for the Grand Opening Event at your candy store! You have lots of fun things planned for the day. First up, spin the wheel to see what each person wins! Next, guess the number of candies in the jar!

Skills: base 10 blocks, expanded form, comparing and ordering, addition, subtraction, number words

TASK #5: THE MYSTERY GUEST

You are SO excited about the mystery guest who is handing out candy at the Grand Opening! Use the place value clues to shade the picture and discover who the mystery guest is!

Skills: tens and ones

TASK#6: THE FIRST BIG ORDER

You just got your first big customer order! Let’s take a look at the graphs to see what she would like!

Skills: skip-counting, picture graphs, data interpretation, addition

TASK#7: INVENTORY DAY

Inventory is important when you own a business! This means that we count all of the candies to see what we have available.

Skills: number words, expanded form, comparing and ordering, adding multiples of 10 and 100

TASK #8: SURPRISE BAGS

You decide to make up some surprise bags to sell! Inside each surprise bag will be a variety of candy.

Skills: skip-counting, addition

TASK #9: WORKING THE CASH REGISTER

Working at the cash register is an important job at the candy store! Figure out how much each person’s candy will cost.

Skills: skip-counting, addition, money

TASK#10: CANDY SPILL!

Oh no! The gumball machine fell over and ALL of the gumballs fell. Out! As you clean up the gumball mess, you count each color of gumball.

Skills: skip-counting, number words, addition

TASK#11: GUMMY SALES

Gummy bears and gummy fish have been the most popular candies at the store so far. Interpret the tally charts to show how many packages have sold this week.

Skills: addition, tens and ones

*

*

WAYS TO USE MATH PROJECTS IN YOUR CLASSROOM:

Math projects are an ideal way to consolidate learning. I recommend using them as an engaging activity AFTER skills have been learned rather than during learning. You will likely find that engagement is very high and that your students ask to do more of these!

There are many ways to use math projects in your classroom. Some of the most popular are:

•a small-group or pairs activity

•a guided math activity to allow you to see where your students are struggling

•a fun, rewarding way to engage your early finishers

•a low-prep, easy-to-implement activity for a substitute teacher

Enjoy!

Shelley Gray

www.ShelleyGrayTeaching.com

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

4.8
Rated 4.85 out of 5, based on 811 reviews
811
ratings
5
694
4
114
3
3
2
0
1
0
Mostly used with 2nd and 3rd grades
Reviews
27
297
248
85
29
15
8
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
5th
6th
7th
What customers are saying
Met expectations
100%
Is a great value
100%
Is standards-aligned
100%
All verified TPT purchases
Great resource
Rated 5 out of 5
July 8, 2026
This is a well thought out resource with a fun theme.
Kaycee B.
500 reviews • Outside the United States
Grades taught: 4th
Fantastic Resource
Rated 5 out of 5
June 16, 2026
This is a great resource! I used this for review and my students were very engaged with the activities .
Nicole E.
51 reviews • Outside the United States
Grades taught: 2nd
Great resource
Rated 5 out of 5
June 9, 2026
This has been a great resource for early finishers to apply their knowledge from the unit
1,723 reviews • Massachusetts
Grades taught: 3rd
Student populations: Emerging bilinguals, Mild to severe disabilities
Fun review project.
Rated 5 out of 5
June 7, 2026
This was a fun activity for the end of the year. Students enjoyed it, and it was a great review.
Mara M.
649 reviews • California
Grades taught: 5th
Kids loved it
Rated 5 out of 5
June 7, 2026
Great tool, very engaged with the activity brought candy to do with
cynthia K.
343 reviews • Nevada
Grades taught: 2nd
Very engaging PBL
Rated 5 out of 5
May 10, 2026
Met expectations
Great value
Standards-aligned
Used with my gifted group for distance learning. They loved the camping theme!
Nicole N.
150 reviews • Arizona
Grades taught: 2nd
Great Resource for WIN GROUPS
Rated 5 out of 5
May 7, 2026
Met expectations
Great value
Standards-aligned
Loved it. My kids enjoyed completing this activity.
216 reviews • Connecticut
Grades taught: 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th
LOVE IT!!!!!!!!
Rated 5 out of 5
April 29, 2026
This resource was absolutely wonderful to use in my classroom! It was well-organized, engaging, and easy for my students to understand. I loved how it reinforced important skills while keeping my students interested and involved. The directions were clear, and it required very little prep on my part, which is always a huge plus. My students enjoyed the activities, and I could see their confidence grow as they worked through the material. I will definitely be using more resources from this seller in the future!
592 reviews
Grades taught: 3rd, 4th, 5th

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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