Place Value Practice
Understanding number positions from tens to millions
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Kindergarten
Ages 5-6
Grade 1
Ages 6-7
Grade 2
Ages 7-8
Grade 3
Ages 8-9
Grade 4
Ages 9-10
Grade 5
Ages 10-11
Featured Place Value Practice
Place Value to Thousands Practice
Practice place value concepts with numbers up to thousands. Understand the value of each digit based on its position in the number.
Place Value to Millions Practice
Practice place value concepts with numbers up to millions. Understand how to read, write, and identify the value of digits in large numbers.
Place Value with Whole Numbers Practice
Practice identifying place values in whole numbers and understanding the value of each digit. Know the difference between a digit and its value.
Comparing Numbers Practice
Practice comparing two and three digit numbers for second grade. Use greater than (>) and less than (<) symbols to compare.
Odd and Even Numbers Practice
Practice identifying odd and even numbers for second grade. Even numbers end in 0, 2, 4, 6, or 8. Odd numbers end in 1, 3, 5, 7, or 9.
Greater Than and Less Than Practice
Learn to compare numbers using greater than, less than, and equal symbols. Number comparison is a foundational math skill for first grade.
Ordering Numbers from Least to Greatest
Practice ordering numbers from least to greatest. This skill helps students understand number sequences and relative value.
Number Line Practice
Practice number line skills including counting, skip counting, and finding midpoints. Number lines build number sense and prepare for integers.
Expanded Form Practice
Practice converting between standard form and expanded form. Understanding place value through expanded form builds number sense.
Word Form Numbers Practice
Convert between word form and standard form for numbers. Reading and writing number words builds place value understanding.
Free Place Value Quiz for Grade 2
Place value is one of the most under-rated math skills — kids who really understand it cruise through every future operation, while those who just memorize procedures hit walls in fourth and fifth grade. This second-grade quiz asks students to identify what digit sits in the ones, tens, or hundreds place of a three-digit number. If your child can do this in under five seconds per question, they've got a solid foundation for two-digit addition, subtraction, and the multi-digit work coming up.
Comparing Numbers Quiz
Comparing whole numbers builds on place value: the number with more digits is automatically bigger; if they have the same number of digits, compare from the leftmost place. This quiz uses two- and three-digit numbers so your first, second, or third grader gets the chance to apply both rules. The greater-than and less-than symbols trip up young kids constantly — the trick is that the symbol always 'eats' the bigger number (the open mouth points at the larger value).
About Place Value
Place value is the foundation of our number system. Understanding that each position represents a different value — ones, tens, hundreds, and beyond — is essential for all arithmetic operations.