visual Value & Place Value Worksheets
These visual place value worksheets help students understand number concepts through hands-on learning with place value blocks, number lines, and place value mats. The visual format makes abstract mathematical concepts more concrete and accessible for learners who benefit from seeing mathematical relationships represented graphically.
About these worksheets
Students work with number lines and place value mats to build number sense. Worksheets include filling in missing values on number lines, reading place value mats, interpreting non-traditional number lines that don't start at zero, and marking values on open number lines within 20 and within 100. Aligned with second grade and general number sense standards.
About these worksheets
Students use base-ten blocks to build understanding of place value. Worksheets progress from identifying values with tens and ones blocks, to working with hundreds blocks, creating and identifying groups of 100, and determining values shown by blocks up to 1,000 and beyond. These concrete visual models make abstract place value concepts tangible for first and second graders.
Creating Groups of 100
- Count by tens to find how many items are in a set of ten-bundles.
- Use groups of ten to make and recognize 100 as 10 tens.
Identifying Groups of 100
- Recognize when a picture or set of objects shows groups of 100.
- Count how many hundreds are shown by counting the groups.
- Tell the value of the groups using hundreds (like 3 groups of 100 is 300).
- Connect groups of 100 to the hundreds place in a number.
About these worksheets
These worksheets develop number comparison and identification skills across grade levels. Activities include finding more and less, comparing two- and three-digit numbers and numbers within one million using inequality symbols, identifying even and odd numbers visually, creating even equations, building numbers from place value descriptions, using place value for multiplication and division, identifying integers, comparing relative size with addition and subtraction, and evaluating number sentences. Resources span first through fourth grade and beyond.
Finding Even or Odd (visual)
- Count a group of shapes and decide if the total is even or odd.
- Use pairing to see if every shape can be matched with a partner with none left over.
- Explain even and odd using simple words like "pairs" and "one left."
- Recognize that even numbers can be split into two equal groups and odd numbers cannot.