Decimal Place Value
Complete Notes & Formulae for 5th Grade Math
📚 Understanding Decimal Place Value
What is a Decimal?
A decimal is a number that has a decimal point separating the whole number part from the fractional part. The decimal point is read as "and."
Example: $3.45$ is read as "three and forty-five hundredths"
The Decimal Point
The decimal point separates:
- Whole numbers (to the left)
- Decimal fractions (to the right)
📊 Decimal Place Value Chart
Place Value Positions:
Thousands | Hundreds | Tens | Ones | • | Tenths | Hundredths | Thousandths |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1000 | 100 | 10 | 1 | . | $\frac{1}{10}$ or 0.1 | $\frac{1}{100}$ or 0.01 | $\frac{1}{1000}$ or 0.001 |
2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | . | 6 | 7 | 8 |
Example: $2345.678$
Read as: "Two thousand, three hundred forty-five and six hundred seventy-eight thousandths"
Understanding Each Place Value
- Tenths place: First digit after the decimal point → $\frac{1}{10}$ or $0.1$
- Hundredths place: Second digit after the decimal point → $\frac{1}{100}$ or $0.01$
- Thousandths place: Third digit after the decimal point → $\frac{1}{1000}$ or $0.001$
🔗 Relationship Between Place Values
Key Relationships
Moving Left (×10):
Each place value is 10 times greater than the place to its right.
$$0.001 \times 10 = 0.01 \times 10 = 0.1 \times 10 = 1 \times 10 = 10$$
Moving Right (÷10):
Each place value is 10 times smaller than the place to its left.
$$10 \div 10 = 1 \div 10 = 0.1 \div 10 = 0.01 \div 10 = 0.001$$
Visual Representation
Example:
In the number $555.555$:
- The $5$ in the hundreds place = $500$ (which is 10 times the tens place)
- The $5$ in the tens place = $50$ (which is 10 times the ones place)
- The $5$ in the ones place = $5$ (which is 10 times the tenths place)
- The $5$ in the tenths place = $0.5$ (which is 10 times the hundredths place)
- The $5$ in the hundredths place = $0.05$ (which is 10 times the thousandths place)
- The $5$ in the thousandths place = $0.005$
✍️ Forms of Decimal Numbers
1. Standard Form
Definition:
The regular way we write numbers with digits and a decimal point.
Example:
$3.456$
2. Word Form
Definition:
Writing the decimal in words.
Important: The decimal point is read as "and"
Example:
$3.456$ = "Three and four hundred fifty-six thousandths"
3. Expanded Form (Using Decimals)
Definition:
Breaking down the number by showing the value of each digit.
Formula: Add the value of each digit
Example:
$3.456 = 3 + 0.4 + 0.05 + 0.006$
4. Expanded Form (Using Fractions)
Definition:
Breaking down the number using fractions to show place values.
Formula: Multiply each digit by its fractional place value
Example:
$$3.456 = (3 \times 1) + (4 \times \frac{1}{10}) + (5 \times \frac{1}{100}) + (6 \times \frac{1}{1000})$$
🧩 Composing & Decomposing Decimals
Composing Decimals
Definition:
Putting parts together to make a decimal number.
Example:
$2 + 0.3 + 0.04 = 2.34$
$1 + 0.5 + 0.06 + 0.007 = 1.567$
Decomposing Decimals
Definition:
Breaking a decimal into its parts in multiple ways.
Example: Decompose $2.45$ in different ways
Way 1: $2 + 0.4 + 0.05$
Way 2: $2 + 0.45$
Way 3: $1 + 1 + 0.4 + 0.05$
Way 4: $1 + 1.45$
Way 5: $2.4 + 0.05$
🎯 Rounding Decimals
Rounding Rules
Steps to Round Decimals:
- Find the rounding place (ones, tenths, hundredths, etc.)
- Look at the digit to the right of the rounding place
- If the digit is 5 or greater (5, 6, 7, 8, 9) → Round UP (add 1)
- If the digit is less than 5 (0, 1, 2, 3, 4) → Round DOWN (stay the same)
- Drop all digits after the rounding place
Rounding to the Nearest Whole Number
Rule:
Look at the tenths place (first digit after the decimal point)
Examples:
$4.3$ → Look at 3 (less than 5) → Round DOWN → $4$
$7.8$ → Look at 8 (5 or greater) → Round UP → $8$
$12.5$ → Look at 5 (5 or greater) → Round UP → $13$
Rounding to the Nearest Tenth
Rule:
Look at the hundredths place (second digit after the decimal point)
Examples:
$3.42$ → Look at 2 (less than 5) → Round DOWN → $3.4$
$8.67$ → Look at 7 (5 or greater) → Round UP → $8.7$
$5.95$ → Look at 5 (5 or greater) → Round UP → $6.0$ or $6$
Rounding to the Nearest Hundredth
Rule:
Look at the thousandths place (third digit after the decimal point)
Examples:
$2.345$ → Look at 5 (5 or greater) → Round UP → $2.35$
$6.782$ → Look at 2 (less than 5) → Round DOWN → $6.78$
$9.999$ → Look at 9 (5 or greater) → Round UP → $10.00$ or $10$
📏 Decimal Number Lines
Understanding Decimal Number Lines
What is a Decimal Number Line?
A number line that shows decimals between whole numbers. It helps visualize the size and position of decimal numbers.
Reading Tenths on a Number Line
Example: Between 0 and 1
The number line is divided into 10 equal parts.
$0.0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1.0$
Reading Hundredths on a Number Line
Example: Between 0 and 0.1
The number line is divided into 10 equal parts (showing hundredths).
$0.00, 0.01, 0.02, 0.03, 0.04, 0.05, 0.06, 0.07, 0.08, 0.09, 0.10$
Tips for Using Number Lines
- Count the number of spaces between whole numbers or marks
- Each space represents an equal part
- Use the number line to compare decimals (numbers to the right are greater)
- Number lines help visualize rounding by showing which whole number is closer
🎨 Place Value Models
Visual Models for Decimals
Common Models:
- Base-10 Blocks:
- Large cube = 1 whole
- Flat = 0.1 (one tenth)
- Rod = 0.01 (one hundredth)
- Small cube = 0.001 (one thousandth)
- Grid Models: 10×10 grid where each small square = 0.01
- Shaded Diagrams: Showing parts of a whole shaded to represent decimals
Reading Visual Models
Example: Grid Model
If a 10×10 grid has 45 squares shaded:
45 out of 100 squares = $\frac{45}{100}$ = $0.45$
📊 Quick Reference Guide
Place | Value | Fraction | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Ones | 1 | $\frac{1}{1}$ | $5$ in $5.0$ |
Tenths | 0.1 | $\frac{1}{10}$ | $3$ in $0.3$ |
Hundredths | 0.01 | $\frac{1}{100}$ | $7$ in $0.07$ |
Thousandths | 0.001 | $\frac{1}{1000}$ | $2$ in $0.002$ |
💡 Important Tips & Reminders
✓ The decimal point is always read as "and"
✓ Each place value is 10 times greater/smaller than the next
✓ Adding zeros to the right of a decimal doesn't change its value: $0.5 = 0.50 = 0.500$
✓ When rounding, always look at the digit to the RIGHT of the rounding place
✓ Remember: 5 or more → round up; less than 5 → round down
✓ Use place value charts to help identify digit positions
✓ Practice reading decimals aloud to master word form
📝 Practice Examples
Example 1: Write in All Forms
Given: $12.378$
Solutions:
Standard Form: $12.378$
Word Form: Twelve and three hundred seventy-eight thousandths
Expanded Form: $10 + 2 + 0.3 + 0.07 + 0.008$
Expanded Form (fractions): $(1 \times 10) + (2 \times 1) + (3 \times \frac{1}{10}) + (7 \times \frac{1}{100}) + (8 \times \frac{1}{1000})$
Example 2: Round to Different Places
Given: $56.847$
Solutions:
Nearest whole: $57$ (look at 8 → round up)
Nearest tenth: $56.8$ (look at 4 → round down)
Nearest hundredth: $56.85$ (look at 7 → round up)
Example 3: Identify Place Value
Given: What is the value of the digit 7 in $45.673$?
Solution:
The digit $7$ is in the hundredths place
Its value is: $7 \times 0.01 = 0.07$ or $\frac{7}{100}$
📘 Master decimal place value by practicing reading, writing, and comparing decimals daily!