1st Grade Value & Place Value Worksheets
Free value & place value worksheets with answer key. No login or account needed. From placing commas to identifying place value, visual or word problems we've got you covered. A grading column and quick grade scale maker grading a breeze and a modified pages help with lower level learners or when just introducing a topic. Great for teachers or for homeschool.
About these worksheets
These worksheets introduce equation concepts and algebraic thinking. Activities include filling in missing numbers to make true expressions, understanding the meaning of the equals sign, writing algebraic expressions with variables, rewriting word sentences as numeric equations, and identifying true and false equations within 20. Resources span first through sixth grade standards.
Understanding Equals (True or False)
- Understand that the equals sign means both sides have the same value.
- Decide whether an equation is true or false by comparing the left side and the right side.
- Solve simple addition or subtraction expressions to check if two sides match.
About these worksheets
Students use base-ten blocks to build understanding of place value. Worksheets progress from identifying values with tens and ones blocks, to working with hundreds blocks, creating and identifying groups of 100, and determining values shown by blocks up to 1,000 and beyond. These concrete visual models make abstract place value concepts tangible for first and second graders.
Place value blocks (10s and 1s)
- Read base-ten blocks and tell what number they show using tens and ones.
- Count tens and ones separately and combine them to make the total value.
- Match a block model to the correct written number (like 34) and say how many tens and ones it has.
- Explain the value of a number by describing it as tens and ones (like 34 is 3 tens and 4 ones).
About these worksheets
These worksheets develop number comparison and identification skills across grade levels. Activities include finding more and less, comparing two- and three-digit numbers and numbers within one million using inequality symbols, identifying even and odd numbers visually, creating even equations, building numbers from place value descriptions, using place value for multiplication and division, identifying integers, comparing relative size with addition and subtraction, and evaluating number sentences. Resources span first through fourth grade and beyond.
Comparing Two Digit Numbers
- Compare two two-digit numbers and decide which one is greater, less, or equal.
- Use the symbols >, <, and = to show how two numbers relate.
- Look at the tens digit first (and then the ones digit if needed) to compare numbers quickly.