🔢 Numbers and Comparing - Grade 3
🔵🔴 Even and Odd Numbers
What are Even Numbers?
Even numbers are whole numbers that can be divided by \(2\) exactly with no remainder!
Key Rules:
- • Even numbers end in: \(0, 2, 4, 6,\) or \(8\)
- • They can be divided by \(2\) with no remainder
- • They can be grouped into pairs with none left over
Examples: \(2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 24, 50, 100, 238\)
What are Odd Numbers?
Odd numbers are whole numbers that cannot be divided by \(2\) exactly - they always leave a remainder of \(1\)!
Key Rules:
- • Odd numbers end in: \(1, 3, 5, 7,\) or \(9\)
- • They leave a remainder of \(1\) when divided by \(2\)
- • When grouped in pairs, there's always one left over
Examples: \(1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 23, 51, 99, 237\)
Quick Test:
To check if a number is even or odd,
look at the LAST digit (ones place)!
➕➖✖️ Even and Odd Arithmetic Rules
➕ Addition Rules
First Number | Second Number | Sum | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Even | Even | Even | \(6 + 8 = 14\) (even) |
Odd | Odd | Even | \(7 + 9 = 16\) (even) |
Even | Odd | Odd | \(4 + 5 = 9\) (odd) |
Odd | Even | Odd | \(3 + 6 = 9\) (odd) |
➖ Subtraction Rules
First Number | Second Number | Difference | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Even | Even | Even | \(12 − 8 = 4\) (even) |
Odd | Odd | Even | \(15 − 7 = 8\) (even) |
Even | Odd | Odd | \(10 − 3 = 7\) (odd) |
Odd | Even | Odd | \(13 − 6 = 7\) (odd) |
✖️ Multiplication Rules
First Number | Second Number | Product | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Even | Even | Even | \(4 \times 6 = 24\) (even) |
Odd | Odd | Odd | \(3 \times 5 = 15\) (odd) |
Even | Odd | Even | \(6 \times 7 = 42\) (even) |
Odd | Even | Even | \(5 \times 8 = 40\) (even) |
⚡ Key Rule: Any number multiplied by an even number is ALWAYS even!
📝 Summary Formula
Even \(\pm\) Even = Even
Odd \(\pm\) Odd = Even
Even \(\pm\) Odd = Odd
Even \(\times\) Anything = Even
Odd \(\times\) Odd = Odd
🦘 Skip-Counting Puzzles
What is Skip-Counting?
Skip-counting means counting by a number other than \(1\) - jumping over numbers in a pattern!
\(\text{Pattern} = \text{Start} + n, + n, + n, + n...\)
Common Skip-Counting Patterns
Skip-Counting by 2s:
\(2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20...\)
Skip-Counting by 5s:
\(5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50...\)
Skip-Counting by 10s:
\(10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100...\)
Skip-Counting by 3s:
\(3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, 27, 30...\)
Skip-Counting by 4s:
\(4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 28, 32, 36, 40...\)
How to Solve Skip-Counting Puzzles
- Find the pattern: Look at the difference between numbers
- Check if it's the same: Subtract each number from the next
- Apply the rule: Add the same amount to find missing numbers
- Double-check: Make sure the pattern continues
Example: \(12, 15, 18, ?, 24\)
Pattern: \(+3\) each time
Missing number: \(18 + 3 = 21\) ✓
🔢 Number Sequences
What is a Number Sequence?
A number sequence is a list of numbers that follows a specific pattern or rule!
Each number in a sequence is called a term
Types of Sequences
1. Ascending Sequence (Increasing)
Numbers get larger as the sequence continues.
Examples:
• \(5, 10, 15, 20, 25\) (add \(5\))
• \(100, 200, 300, 400\) (add \(100\))
• \(3, 6, 9, 12, 15\) (add \(3\))
2. Descending Sequence (Decreasing)
Numbers get smaller as the sequence continues.
Examples:
• \(50, 45, 40, 35, 30\) (subtract \(5\))
• \(100, 90, 80, 70\) (subtract \(10\))
• \(30, 27, 24, 21\) (subtract \(3\))
Finding the Rule
\(\text{Next Term} = \text{Current Term} \pm \text{Rule}\)
Example Problem: Find the next two numbers: \(7, 14, 21, 28, ?, ?\)
Step 1: Find the difference: \(14 - 7 = 7\), \(21 - 14 = 7\), \(28 - 21 = 7\)
Step 2: The rule is "add \(7\)"
Step 3: Apply the rule: \(28 + 7 = 35\), \(35 + 7 = 42\)
Answer: \(35, 42\) ✓
🏆 Ordinal Numbers to 100th
What are Ordinal Numbers?
Ordinal numbers show the position or order of things in a list!
They answer the question: "Which position?"
Cardinal Numbers: Tell "how many" → \(1, 2, 3, 4, 5\)
Ordinal Numbers: Tell "which position" → 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th
Rules for Writing Ordinal Numbers
Rule 1: Numbers ending in 1 → use "st"
Examples: 1st, 21st, 31st, 41st, 51st, 61st, 71st, 81st, 91st
Exception: 11th (NOT 11st)
Rule 2: Numbers ending in 2 → use "nd"
Examples: 2nd, 22nd, 32nd, 42nd, 52nd, 62nd, 72nd, 82nd, 92nd
Exception: 12th (NOT 12nd)
Rule 3: Numbers ending in 3 → use "rd"
Examples: 3rd, 23rd, 33rd, 43rd, 53rd, 63rd, 73rd, 83rd, 93rd
Exception: 13th (NOT 13rd)
Rule 4: All other numbers → use "th"
Examples: 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 30th, 40th, 50th, 60th, 70th, 80th, 90th, 100th
Quick Reference Chart
Number | Ordinal | In Words |
---|---|---|
\(1\) | 1st | First |
\(2\) | 2nd | Second |
\(3\) | 3rd | Third |
\(10\) | 10th | Tenth |
\(20\) | 20th | Twentieth |
\(50\) | 50th | Fiftieth |
\(100\) | 100th | Hundredth |
✍️ Write Numbers in Words
Place Value Chart
Thousands | Hundreds | Tens | Ones |
---|---|---|---|
\(5\) | \(3\) | \(4\) | \(7\) |
\(5,347 = \) Five Thousand Three Hundred Forty-Seven
Steps to Write Numbers in Words
- Break the number by place value
- Write the thousands place first (if any)
- Write the hundreds place (if any)
- Write the tens and ones together
- Connect with proper words (hundred, thousand, etc.)
Examples
1. \(234 = \) Two Hundred Thirty-Four
2. \(508 = \) Five Hundred Eight
3. \(1,056 = \) One Thousand Fifty-Six
4. \(3,421 = \) Three Thousand Four Hundred Twenty-One
5. \(9,000 = \) Nine Thousand
⚠️ Important Rules
- Use hyphens for numbers 21-99 (twenty-one, thirty-five)
- Use "and" only for decimals (not needed for whole numbers in US style)
- Never use "and" between hundreds and tens
- Always capitalize the first word
⚖️ Comparing Numbers
Comparison Symbols
\(>\) means "greater than" (bigger)
\(<\) means "less than" (smaller)
\(=\) means "equal to" (same)
💡 Trick: The symbol always points to the smaller number!
Steps to Compare Numbers
- Count the digits: More digits = bigger number
- If same digits, compare from left to right:
- Start with the thousands place
- Then hundreds place
- Then tens place
- Finally ones place
- Stop when you find a difference
- Use the correct symbol
Examples
Example 1: Different Number of Digits
Compare: \(234\) and \(1,567\)
\(234\) has \(3\) digits
\(1,567\) has \(4\) digits
Answer: \(234 < 1,567\) ✓
Example 2: Same Number of Digits
Compare: \(3,456\) and \(3,489\)
Thousands: \(3 = 3\) (same)
Hundreds: \(4 = 4\) (same)
Tens: \(5 < 8\) (different!) ← Stop here
Answer: \(3,456 < 3,489\) ✓
Example 3: Equal Numbers
Compare: \(6,782\) and \(6,782\)
All digits are the same!
Answer: \(6,782 = 6,782\) ✓
🏅 Which Number is Greatest/Least?
Definitions
Greatest: The biggest or largest number
Least: The smallest number
How to Find Greatest/Least
- Look at number of digits first
- Most digits = greatest
- Fewest digits = least
- If all have same digits, compare from left
- Compare each place value until you find the answer
Example Problem
Find the greatest and least numbers:
\(234, 1,456, 89, 5,678, 567\)
Step 1: Count digits in each number:
• \(234\) → \(3\) digits
• \(1,456\) → \(4\) digits
• \(89\) → \(2\) digits ← Least!
• \(5,678\) → \(4\) digits
• \(567\) → \(3\) digits
Step 2: Find greatest (compare 4-digit numbers):
\(1,456\) vs \(5,678\)
Thousands place: \(1 < 5\)
So \(5,678\) is greatest! ✓
Answer:
Greatest: \(5,678\)
Least: \(89\)
🔢 Put Numbers in Order
Types of Ordering
1. Ascending Order (Least to Greatest)
Arrange numbers from smallest to largest
Example: \(23, 67, 89, 234, 567\) ✓
2. Descending Order (Greatest to Least)
Arrange numbers from largest to smallest
Example: \(567, 234, 89, 67, 23\) ✓
Steps to Order Numbers
- Compare the numbers using place value
- Find the smallest (or largest) first
- Continue comparing the remaining numbers
- Write them in order from least to greatest (or vice versa)
- Check your answer!
Complete Example
Problem: Put these numbers in ascending order:
\(456, 89, 1,234, 567, 45\)
Step 1: Identify digit counts:
• \(45\) → \(2\) digits
• \(89\) → \(2\) digits
• \(456\) → \(3\) digits
• \(567\) → \(3\) digits
• \(1,234\) → \(4\) digits
Step 2: Order by digit count first, then by value:
2-digit: \(45 < 89\)
3-digit: \(456 < 567\)
4-digit: \(1,234\)
Final Answer (Ascending):
\(45, 89, 456, 567, 1,234\) ✓
📝 Important Formulas & Rules Summary
Even & Odd Rules:
Even \(\pm\) Even = Even
Odd \(\pm\) Odd = Even
Even \(\pm\) Odd = Odd
Even \(\times\) Any = Even
Odd \(\times\) Odd = Odd
Sequence Formula:
\(\text{Next Term} = \text{Current Term} \pm \text{Pattern}\)
Ordinal Suffix Rules:
Ends in 1 → "st" (except 11th)
Ends in 2 → "nd" (except 12th)
Ends in 3 → "rd" (except 13th)
All others → "th"
Comparison Symbols:
\(>\) Greater Than
\(<\) Less Than
\(=\) Equal To
💡 Quick Learning Tips
- ✓ Even numbers end in 0, 2, 4, 6, 8
- ✓ Odd numbers end in 1, 3, 5, 7, 9
- ✓ Remember: Even × Anything = Even!
- ✓ Use skip-counting to multiply faster
- ✓ Look for patterns in sequences
- ✓ Remember the "teens" exceptions: 11th, 12th, 13th
- ✓ When comparing, start from the left (biggest place value)
- ✓ More digits usually means bigger number
- ✓ The < symbol points to the smaller number
- ✓ Practice writing numbers in words daily!
- ✓ Use number lines to visualize ordering
- ✓ Always double-check your comparisons!