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Place Value Using Base Ten Lesson | Units, Rods & Flats
Place Value Using Base Ten Lesson | Units, Rods & Flats
Place Value Using Base Ten Lesson | Units, Rods & Flats
Place Value Using Base Ten Lesson | Units, Rods & Flats
Place Value Using Base Ten Lesson | Units, Rods & Flats
Place Value Using Base Ten Lesson | Units, Rods & Flats
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Description

Base Ten lesson covering Flats with 12 practice questions using Units, Rods & Flats. Questions use interactive moveable numbers and Unit, Rod & Flat graphics in Google slides or can be printed and used as is. Follows lesson on Rods here.


Bundle:

Place Value Using Base Ten Bundle | 192 pages, 15 products

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Place Value Using Base Ten Lesson | Units, Rods & Flats

Tinkering Tadpole
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$2.00

Highlights

Digital downloads
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Grades
1st - 2nd
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Standards
Pages
15

Save even more with bundles

Bundle combining four lessons on Units, Rods, Flats and Cubes (each lesson includes 12 practice questions), four practice question sets (12 questions each), four assessments (12 questions each) and three review sets (12, 16 and 20 pages respectively). That is 192 pages in total over the 15 Google s
Price $20.00Original Price $30.00Save $10.00
15

Description

Base Ten lesson covering Flats with 12 practice questions using Units, Rods & Flats. Questions use interactive moveable numbers and Unit, Rod & Flat graphics in Google slides or can be printed and used as is. Follows lesson on Rods here.


Bundle:

Place Value Using Base Ten Bundle | 192 pages, 15 products

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.

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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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