Here you will find our selection of 5th Grade Place Value Worksheets which will help you to learn place value with decimals up to 3dp.
If you're a teacher or a parent looking for high-quality 5th grade math worksheets, look no further. See these 5th grade printable math worksheets for practicing skills.
Do you want to assign your 5th graders a fun summer review? Do you want to challenge students in reviewing Math Skills for 6th grade? CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD If you said YES, this is the perfect Summer Math packet that your fifth graders will complete! Thousands of students have finished this packet and avoided the Summer slide. It's full of fifth-grade common core math problems that focus on fun coloring, puzzles, and problem solving. CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD How to use it: 1. A fun review at the end of 5th grade during May & June or after testing! 2. A summer packet for students to complete at home during June, July, & August! 3. A beginning of 6th grade year review activities during August & September!! THIS SUMMER MATH PACKET FEATURES: This is a 30 day Summer Math Activities Packet. It is the perfect math review to help students avoid the Summer Slide! FUN activities and puzzles centered on reviewing math curriculum. Designed for students who have completed 5th grade and are going into 6th grade. Great end of year review for 5th Grade or Beginning of the Year for 6th Grade! Includes 5th grade math problems for review and practice. Tied to benchmarks required for 6th grade. Keep your students on target with the tracking page. As they complete pages in the packet, students will color a part of a beach picture until they complete the packet. ALL ANSWER KEYS are included. A Sample Letter to parents & students from Math Department. (I use this every year when I send home the summer packet!) Certificate of completion for finishing this FUN Summer Packet. Lots of coloring fun! Students are encouraged to color every page of the Summer math packet. Table of Contents: Days 1-4: Writing simple expressions & analyzing patterns Days 5-8: Performing operations with decimals Days 9-13: Adding and subtracting fractions Days 14-17: Multiplying and dividing fractions Days 18-19: Understanding place value Day 20-22: Converting measures Day 23-24: Representing and interpreting data Day 25-26: Understanding volume Day 27-29: Graphing points Day 30: Classifying 2-D figures Other teachers and parents have left the following reviews: "Great summer review for my son!" -Christina "I used these for summer tutoring and it made math so much more fun!" -Allison "Great resource, and I love that you have so many levels!" -Faith "I am using this resource to review with students entering 6th grade! They love the graphics and how fun each page is!" -Gabriella "My kiddos are working through this packet this summer." -Melissa "My sixth-grade boy I tutor loves this packet so far!" -Cherie "I love this! I am actually using it to review math with my 5th and 6th grade group for ELD. So I am focusing on the language of math and this is working really well." -Teacher "So many great was to use this packet! Too bad I don't teach 5/6 anymore. I'm teaching 3/4 this year but this resource is so good I'll probably buy that one too." -Sandra "Sent this home as a summer packet to be returned to me in August. Many students brought it back complete saying that it was easy for them to figure out how to do on their own. Thanks!" -Teacher Keep Summer math exciting and your students will enjoy doing it! I have taught summer school and assigned summer assignments, but the one that works is the math that is interactive, challenging, and fun. I hope this is an engaging and fun Summer packet for your fifth grade students to complete. Happy Teaching!
I’m here to share a fraction anchor chart freebie and a hands-on mini lesson idea I used with my math intervention students. When we started our unit on fractions and did our pre-assessments, I quickly learned that I have a small group of students who need quite a bit of intervention. Unfortunately, many of them...
I have always enjoyed teaching volume to my students. It's one of those interesting math concepts that requires students to use their visual spatial reasoning. I find that a lot of students who struggle with other math concepts like fractions really excel in volume. I love any math concept that can boost a student's math confidence! There are a couple of things that I have learned work best for my students when it comes to calculating the volume of prisms and composite figures: 1. Teach all of the different ways to find volume and let students choose the one that works best for them. There are plenty of different strategies that students can use to calculate volume besides length x width x height. For example, if the cubes are visible: 1. Count each cube. 2. Count the layers and add them together. 3. Multiply the length x width x height. 4. Calculate the area of the base and multiply it by the height. Most of my students eventually gravitate towards the formulas, but many also check their work with one of the other strategies. If not all of the cubes are visible: 1. Count each cube. 2. Length x Width and then add the remaining cubes. When I ask students to tell me how many more cubes will be needed to fill the prism, some students choose to count all of the empty spaces, and others find the volume of the entire prism and then subtract the visible cubes. 2. Hands-on practice is a must! When I first start this unit, I teach my students the difference between 1-dimensional, 2-dimensional, and 3-dimensional figures. This truly helps them understand the difference between "squared" and "cubed." This year, I also saved empty boxes from my pantry instead of throwing them away and used them for our volume unit. I created several different center activities that my students rotated through, and it was a hit! Giving them the opportunity to explore helped them gain a deep understanding of volume. For example, in one of the centers, students used Unifix Cubes to fill different small boxes. Here they counted how many cubes were required to fill the box, and then they took the Unifix Cubes out and used the formula "length x width x height" to learn that counting and using the formula result in the same answer. In another center, I gave students a certain length, width, and height, and they built the prisms and counted the cubes to determine the volume. This really helped engrain which side was the length, and which side was the width (since I often get a lot of questions about the two). 3. Scaffold instruction when teaching volume of composite figures. For years I made the mistake of teaching my students additive volume of composite figures by simply introducing the topic and then throwing them in to problems with missing sides. This concept was always a struggle, and I needed to figure out a better way. This year, I broke down each step for my students and worked slowly through each problem before moving on to more challenging ones. As you can see in my interactive notes below, we started off by finding all missing sides FIRST. Too often my students would start multiplying whichever numbers they saw without realizing that sides were missing. Then we focused on finding the volume of each figure at a time, paying special attention to the length, width, and height. We did the same with the second figure and then added the volume together for the composite figure. I made scaffolded sheets that got harder and harder, but only after students mastered each step. This activity WORKED SO WELL! What was the biggest mistake that my students made? Multiplication and addition errors. *sigh* Since this was such an important skill that I wanted my students to master, they had to show me their answers before moving on to the next math activity. If they got anything wrong, I sent them back to revise. They know my policy - we need to learn from our mistakes in math! 4. Allow students to work in partners One of my favorite ways to use task cards in the classroom are to print them out and tape them around the room. This gets my students moving and I have found that they are much more focused. The purpose of task cards (in my opinion) should be continued practice of a skill through a variety of different questions. I always allow my students to work in partners when completing task cards. Since students are moving around the room instead of staying in one place, I have a chance to listen to some of their conversations as they get closer to my small group table. Side note - I strategically tape the more challenging problems close to my small group table so that I can hear that discussion. : ) I hear the BEST conversations when my students are working with a partner when their answers don't match. One partner explains their point of view, and the other naturally explains theirs. This usually results in three scenarios: 1. One of the students changes his/her answer. 2. They both rework the problem to see if their new answer matches. 3. They get frustrated and ask me or another group (if I'm busy) for help. This right here has SO MUCH value! 5. Have some fun! Additive volume is pretty labor intensive and hard on the brain. We took a few breaks during this unit and completed: A Color by Number Activity (which I love because it is self-checking) A Volume Sort (this is free!) We listened to some volume songs. Here is one to the tune of "Happy." My students enjoy playing this game! I hope these ideas make teaching volume a little easier to understand! If you are interested in the resources found in this post, see below! Volume Bundle Clipart from @rulersandpanbalances Happy Teaching!
Math Spiral Review Homework & morning work have proven to be the most effective resource in helping students practice and retain math skills.
Parentheses, Brackets and Braces in Math Expressions – Hard Version Evaluate Expressions with Parentheses, Brackets & Braces – Free printable expression worksheets. Evaluate Expressions with Parentheses, Brackets & Braces Answers – Just to save you time! (CCSS.Math.Content.5.OA.A.1 – Use parentheses, brackets, or braces in numerical expressions, and evaluate expressions with these symbols.) This worksheet will…
Teach the 5th grade financial literacy TEKS with interactive activities that are easy to prepare and your students will love.
Yesterday a co-worker was needing something to do with her 5th graders for Coordinate Graphing so I sent my Groundhog Graphing Unit over to her which she (and her kids) fell in love with! Since I wanted them to also have the ability to have a resource for notes, she worked with them to create ... Read more
This is an expanded mathematics form worksheet that will help your youngster simply learn how to form numbers. When your youngster sees such numbers, he…
Math worksheets are important in general to help children learn math more quickly and be able to recognize different math equations and how to solve them. Missing factor multiplication worksheets and multiplication printables are especially