Description
Keep your students engaged as they complete this unique sorting activity digitally, in Google Slides, or as a PDF that you can print out and use as a traditional paper version! You receive both! It provides practice in a fun sorting format that will keep your students interested. You can simply assign it digitally, with a few clicks, or you can have students use it as a Math Center or as a math notebook activity.
For more like this, check out the 5th Grade Math Google Slides Sorting Bundle!
For 5th graders, this is a prerequisite skill. 5th graders are asked to write decimals in standard and expanded form, but they will struggle with that unless they can break down whole numbers first.
A link the Google Slides document is provided in the PDF that you will receive at the time of your purchase. You will need a Google account to access the Google Slides versions. Your students will need access to Google Slides as well.
The directions are easy: Sort the cards into the proper place on the table. Check your work by using the key on slide #2. The key is revealed by simply sliding away the rectangle object that is covering the answers. (If you don't want your students to have access to the key, simply delete that slide.)
These make great math centers or individual classwork or homework.
Check out the Preview to see what the digital and paper versions looks like.
Standard and Expanded Form Prerequisite Skill - Google Slides & PDF Math Sorting
Highlights
Description
Keep your students engaged as they complete this unique sorting activity digitally, in Google Slides, or as a PDF that you can print out and use as a traditional paper version! You receive both! It provides practice in a fun sorting format that will keep your students interested. You can simply assign it digitally, with a few clicks, or you can have students use it as a Math Center or as a math notebook activity.
For more like this, check out the 5th Grade Math Google Slides Sorting Bundle!
For 5th graders, this is a prerequisite skill. 5th graders are asked to write decimals in standard and expanded form, but they will struggle with that unless they can break down whole numbers first.
A link the Google Slides document is provided in the PDF that you will receive at the time of your purchase. You will need a Google account to access the Google Slides versions. Your students will need access to Google Slides as well.
The directions are easy: Sort the cards into the proper place on the table. Check your work by using the key on slide #2. The key is revealed by simply sliding away the rectangle object that is covering the answers. (If you don't want your students to have access to the key, simply delete that slide.)
These make great math centers or individual classwork or homework.
Check out the Preview to see what the digital and paper versions looks like.




