Decimal Place Value
Fifth Grade Math - Complete Guide
📚 Understanding Decimals
What is a Decimal Number?
A decimal number is made up of a whole number part and a fractional part separated by a dot called the decimal point.
Example: \(42.75\)
42 = Whole number part | . = Decimal point | 75 = Fractional part
Important Rule
As we move left from the decimal point, each place value becomes 10 times greater.
As we move right from the decimal point, each place value becomes 10 times smaller.
📊 Decimal Place Value Chart
Complete Place Value Chart
Thousands | Hundreds | Tens | Ones | â—Ź | Tenths | Hundredths | Thousandths |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1,000 | 100 | 10 | 1 | . | \(\frac{1}{10}\) = 0.1 | \(\frac{1}{100}\) = 0.01 | \(\frac{1}{1000}\) = 0.001 |
3 | 2 | 5 | 6 | . | 7 | 4 | 8 |
Example: \(3256.748\) = Three thousand two hundred fifty-six and seven hundred forty-eight thousandths
Understanding Each Place Value
Left of Decimal Point (Whole Numbers):
Ones → Tens → Hundreds → Thousands → Ten Thousands
Right of Decimal Point (Fractional Parts):
Tenths → Hundredths → Thousandths → Ten-Thousandths
🔍 Finding Place Values in Decimal Numbers
Formula for Place Value
\[\text{Place Value} = \text{Digit} \times \text{Position Value}\]
đź’ˇ Example: Find place values in \(673.258\)
Digit | Position | Place Value | Value |
---|---|---|---|
6 | Hundreds | \(6 \times 100\) | 600 |
7 | Tens | \(7 \times 10\) | 70 |
3 | Ones | \(3 \times 1\) | 3 |
2 | Tenths | \(2 \times \frac{1}{10}\) | 0.2 |
5 | Hundredths | \(5 \times \frac{1}{100}\) | 0.05 |
8 | Thousandths | \(8 \times \frac{1}{1000}\) | 0.008 |
đź”— Relationship Between Decimal Place Values
Key Relationships
Moving LEFT (Ă—10):
Each place value is 10 times greater than the one to its right
Tenths → Ones → Tens → Hundreds → Thousands
Moving RIGHT (Ă·10):
Each place value is 10 times smaller than the one to its left
Thousands → Hundreds → Tens → Ones → Tenths
đź’ˇ Examples
1 one = 10 tenths
\(1 = 10 \times 0.1\)
1 tenth = 10 hundredths
\(0.1 = 10 \times 0.01\)
1 hundredth = 10 thousandths
\(0.01 = 10 \times 0.001\)
1 ten = 10 ones
\(10 = 10 \times 1\)
📝 Expanded Form of Decimals
Standard Form vs Expanded Form
Standard Form: The regular way to write a number
Expanded Form: Writing each digit according to its place value and adding them
Method 1: Expanded Form (Decimals)
Example: Write \(83.34\) in expanded form
Step 1: Expand whole number part → \(80 + 3\)
Step 2: Expand decimal part → \(0.3 + 0.04\)
Step 3: Combine → \(80 + 3 + 0.3 + 0.04\)
âś“ Answer: \(83.34 = 80 + 3 + 0.3 + 0.04\)
Method 2: Expanded Form Using Fractions
\[\text{Expanded Form} = (\text{Digit} \times \text{Place Value})\]
Example: Write \(1.234\) in expanded form using fractions
Step 1: Ones place → \(1 \times 1 = 1\)
Step 2: Tenths place → \(2 \times \frac{1}{10} = \frac{2}{10}\)
Step 3: Hundredths place → \(3 \times \frac{1}{100} = \frac{3}{100}\)
Step 4: Thousandths place → \(4 \times \frac{1}{1000} = \frac{4}{1000}\)
Step 5: Combine all
âś“ Answer: \(1 + \frac{2}{10} + \frac{3}{100} + \frac{4}{1000}\)
đź’¬ Writing Decimals in Words
📝 Steps to Write Decimals in Words
- Write the whole number part in words
- Say "and" for the decimal point
- Write the decimal part as a whole number
- Add the place value name of the last digit
đź’ˇ Examples
\(32.5\)
Thirty-two and five tenths
\(7.65\)
Seven and sixty-five hundredths
\(124.082\)
One hundred twenty-four and eighty-two thousandths
\(456.8\)
Four hundred fifty-six and eight tenths
🔄 Compose and Decompose Decimals
What Does It Mean?
Compose:
Putting parts together to make a decimal number
Decompose:
Breaking a decimal number into parts in different ways
đź’ˇ Example: Decompose \(2.45\) in Multiple Ways
Way 1: By Place Value
\(2 + 0.4 + 0.05\)
Way 2: Using Whole and Decimal
\(2 + 0.45\)
Way 3: All as Tenths
\(2.0 + 0.3 + 0.15\) or \(1 + 1 + 0.45\)
Way 4: Using Fractions
\(2 + \frac{4}{10} + \frac{5}{100}\)
🎯 Rounding Decimals
Rounding Rules
If the digit is 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4:
Round DOWN (keep the rounding digit the same)
If the digit is 5, 6, 7, 8, or 9:
Round UP (add 1 to the rounding digit)
📝 Steps to Round Decimals
- Find the place value you want to round to
- Look at the digit to the RIGHT of that place
- If it's 5 or more → Round UP
- If it's 4 or less → Round DOWN
- Drop all digits after the rounding place
đź’ˇ Examples
Example 1: Round \(3.67\) to the nearest tenth
Step 1: Identify tenths place → 6
Step 2: Look at the digit to the right → 7
Step 3: Since 7 ≥ 5, round UP → \(6 + 1 = 7\)
Step 4: Drop digits after tenths place
âś“ Answer: \(3.7\)
Example 2: Round \(0.439\) to the nearest hundredth
Step 1: Identify hundredths place → 3
Step 2: Look at the digit to the right → 9
Step 3: Since 9 ≥ 5, round UP → \(3 + 1 = 4\)
Step 4: Drop digits after hundredths place
âś“ Answer: \(0.44\)
Example 3: Round \(12.832\) to the nearest whole number
Step 1: Identify ones place → 2
Step 2: Look at the digit to the right → 8
Step 3: Since 8 ≥ 5, round UP → \(12 + 1 = 13\)
Step 4: Drop the decimal part
âś“ Answer: \(13\)
📏 Decimal Number Lines
Understanding Decimal Number Lines
A decimal number line helps us visualize where decimal numbers are located and compare their values.
Example: Number Line from 0 to 1 (Tenths)
0────0.1────0.2────0.3────0.4────0.5────0.6────0.7────0.8────0.9────1
Each mark represents one tenth (0.1)
Example: Number Line from 0 to 0.1 (Hundredths)
0──0.01──0.02──0.03──0.04──0.05──0.06──0.07──0.08──0.09──0.1
Each mark represents one hundredth (0.01)
đź’ˇ Key Points
- Numbers to the right are greater
- Numbers to the left are smaller
- The space between marks shows the interval
- Count the marks carefully to identify the decimal value
đź“‹ Quick Reference Summary
Concept | Key Formula/Rule |
---|---|
Place Value | \(\text{Digit} \times \text{Position Value}\) |
Tenths | \(\frac{1}{10} = 0.1\) |
Hundredths | \(\frac{1}{100} = 0.01\) |
Thousandths | \(\frac{1}{1000} = 0.001\) |
Relationship | Each place = 10 Ă— place to the right |
Rounding (≥5) | Round UP (add 1) |
Rounding (<5) | Round DOWN (stay same) |
🎯 Remember the Rhyme!
"Four and below, just let it go.
Five and above, give it a shove!"