abc123math counting
COUNTING

Counting  Arithmetic  Fractions  Graphing  Algebra  Geometry


Multiples and Groups

Add/Sub to 100

Numeration


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Numbers and Numeration

•Count from/to Any Number to a Billion

•Name Any Whole Number to a Billion

•Round Numbers to Nearest 10 100 1000

•Scientific Notation Operations (+ - * ÷)

The Counting Section features a Multiples Table showing Digits 1 - 12, up to 120. Use this as a reference throughout Level/1 as students are learning Unit Operations.

Counting Groups contains 6 tools:
• Dots and Digits where in Dots mode students learn about precision by highlighting an exact number of Dots and in Digits mode realize benefits counting by groups of 10s instead of 1s.
• Group Similar Shapes has students sort 10 shapes into 3 groups, Circles Squares and Triangles, in Hard Mode 20 Shapes are sorted into 4 Groups, including an Other Group.
• Doubles and Halves generates a number less than 500 and requires no carry 10 in easy mode.
•Counting money presents up to 3 units (easy) or 9 units (hard) of: Dollar Quarter Dime Nickel Penny, Student must total the amount and answer with a dollar sign and 2 Decimals
•Mean Median Mode generates sets of 10 digits, students may use a pencil, paper and calculator to complete this skill.


•Sums between 10 and 20 presents a 6x6 matrix of digits, students click combinations that make the target Sum.

The Add and Subtract to 100 tool helps students improve their base10 acumen by adding up to and over the next group of 10 faster. The tool is timed and intended to be used regulaurly, as students improve skills by getting faster in all 4 operating modes.

The Numeration section features 4 tools:
• Counting to/from 1 Any Number to a Thousand, Million and Billion. Students learn to work right to left starting with the least significant digit first then moving left.
• Name Numbers to a Thousand Million and Billion offers a word bank to build the numbers by clicking on the words.
• Rounding Numbers up to 10,000 generates 5 numbers to be rounded to the nearest 10 100 and 1000.
• Scientific Notation generates 2 numbers not more than 4 powers apart and has students Add Subtract Multiply Divide them.

Each tool in the Numeration Section has a tutorial showing How-To-Do the skill.

Counting Section Video

The Multiples Table

•Dots and Digits

•Doubles and Halves

•Counting Money

•Mean Median Mode

•Group Similar Shapes  

•Sums from 10 to 20

•Periods of Tens

•Print Multiples


Mean: is the average of all the numbers in the set. Simply add the numbers to get a total sum then divide by the number of digits to get Mean.

Median: is the number in the middle of the sorted set. First rewrite the numbers sorted Low to Hi.

• For sets with an odd number of digits the digit in the middle is the Median.

• If the set has an even number of digits the mean of the two middle digits is the Median.

Mode: is the digit which occurs most often. If a tie then there is No Mode.

Attempt / Correct
Mean:0/0   Median:0/0   Mode:0/0
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NewAnswer

Mean Median Mode Calculations

  Mean

Median

  Mode

In EASY mode each digit will half or double without any carry or borrow, across the next group of 10

In HARD mode there may be carry or borrow across groups of 10

The answers in either mode will always be a whole number

Attempt / Correct
Easy   Hard
Halves: 0/0   0/0
Doubles: 0/0   0/0

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EasyHard
New Answer


 

 HALF

DOUBLE


A 6x6 matrix of single digits is displayed. Clicking a digit, highlights it and adds it to the working sum. If working sum = target number, it is counted, digits are removed, working sum is reset to 0. If the target number is exceeded, the digits are reset and working sum set to 0. Try to use all the digits, until no more sums can be made.

This tool counts correct target sums made. It is intended to help students practice base10 addition. Students learn to decompose and recompose digits and sums.

  0 Groups Made

New Numbers


Enter a target number between 10 and 20
then click New Numbers


In Easier mode there may be up to 3 of each
In Harder mode, there may be up to 9 of each.

Students learn to add (or count) the money in their heads, keeping track of the totals as they go.

Attempt / Correct
Up to 3 Coins:0/0
Up to 9 Coins:0/0

hide reset

3 Coins   9 Coins
NewAnswer

Enter Dollars and Cents as Shown

1 Dollar = 100¢

1 Quarter = 25¢

1 Dime = 10¢

1 Nickel = 5¢

1 Penny = 1¢

Easy mode: Up to One Thousand

Medium mode: Up to One Million

Hard mode: Up to One Billion

Students learn about precision and working with the least significant digits first, from right to left.

Attempt / Correct
Fwd: 0/0   0/0   0/0
Bwd: 0/0   0/0   0/0

resethide

ForwardBackward
Thousand Million Billion
New Numbers


Periods of Tens

From: 00     To: 00

 


Powers of Ten

121110 9876 5432 10 101,000,000,000,000:→ One Trillion 10100,000,000,000:→ One Hundred Billion 1010,000,000,000:→ Ten Billion 101,000,000,000:→ One Billion 10100,000,000:→ One Hundred Million 1010,000,000:→ Ten Million 101,000,000:→ One Million 10100,000:→ One Hundred Thousand 1010,000:→ Ten Thousand 101,000:→ One Thousand 10100:→ One Hundred 1010:→ Ten 101:→ One

Multiples Table

1s 10s 5s 9s 11s     2s 4s 8s

3s 6s 12s     7s     Primes


123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142 434445464748495051 525354555657 5859606162636465666768697071727374 75767778798081828384858687 888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120

If you can Name 3 digit numbers - you can Name Any Number because large numbers are made of 3 digit names followed by the Period of 10s Name.

Try to name this number then click here to see if you are correct.

436,324,789,003,465 ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ Trillions Billions Millions Thousands  Ones

Say the Number

436 → Four Hundred Thirty Six Trillion

324 → Three Hundred Twenty Four Billion

789 → Seven Hundred Eighty Nine Million

003 → Three Thousand

465 → Four Hundred Sixty Five


The tool operates in 3 modes requiring numbers to be named up to A Thousand, Million or Billion.

Attempt / Correct
T:0/0  M:0/0  B:0/0
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Thousand   Million   Billion
New NumberCheck Answer


How to Name NumbersPeriods of Tens

Click wordbank to build the number's name


1:one       11:eleven   30:thirty  
2:two 12:twelve 40:forty
3:three 13:thirteen 50:fifty
4:four 14:fourteen 60:sixty
5:five 15:fifteen 70:seventy
6:six 16:sixteen 80:eighty
7:seven 17:seventeen 90:ninety
8:eight 18:eightteen Hundred
9:nine 19:nineteen Thousand
10:ten 20:twenty Million

clear input


What is Scientific Notation

Scientific notation is a way to write very large or small numbers in a consistent format. There are two parts to the number:

First: The number which must have only one non-zero digit to the left of the decimal:   #.###...

Remember after an Add Subtract Multiply or Divide Operation, the digit may not have exactly One Digit to the left of the decimal, in this case the number must be formatted.

Second: The power of ten to multiply by.

Scientific Notation Regular Number

1.2345 x 1012.345

1.2345 x 10-1.12345

1.2345 x 101.2345

Print Worksheet / Key

WhyHow

Why use Scientific Notation

Some numbers are so big they don't have a name

602,000,000,000,000,000,000,000

Number of Atoms in a Mole used in High School Chemistry

6.02 x 10²³


Some numbers are so small they don't have a name

0.000000000675

The Wave Length of Red Light in Meters used in Physics

6.75 • 10-10


Scientific Notation is a way to communicate exact quantities all over the world.  Every country in every continent reads and processes scientific notation the same way.

What

How


Operations Worksheet / Key

WhatWhy

How to Add Subtract Multiply Divide

Addition and Subtraction require Exponents to be the same

Adding (1.1 x 1019) + (2.2 x 1019) is easy

The Answer is (3.3 x 1019)

Look at the same problem written in expanded form

 11000000000000000000

+22000000000000000000

 33000000000000000000


If the exponents do not match we must convert one

1.1•1019 + 2.2•1014

To make exponents match we move the decimal points
and change the exponents - see below:

2.2•1014 = .22•1015 = .022•1016 = .... = .000022•1019

Look at the same problem written in expanded form

 11000000000000000000

+     220000000000000

 11000220000000000000

Answer: 1.100022•1019

If we are rounding to 2 decimals, the second number is too small to matter and the answer is the bigger number.


Multiplication is easier. First multiply the digits then add the exponents.

(2.2•1019) • (2.0•1014)

2.2 • 2.0 = 4.4

1019 • 1014 = 10(19 + 14) = 1033

Answer = 4.4 • 1033


Division is also easier. First divide the digits then subtract the exponents.

(2.2•1019) / (2.0•1014)

2.2 / 2.0 = 1.1

1019 / 1014 = 10(19 - 14) = 105

Answer = 1.1 • 105


This tool generates two numbers in scientific notation, each with two significant digits and no more than 4 powers apart, presenting them in: Add Subtract Multiply Divide operations.

attempt/correct
add   subtract   multiply   divide
0/0   0/0   0/0   0/0
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New   Answer


WhatWhyHow

= • 10


= • 10


= • 10


= • 10

Doubles and Halves

Attempt / Correct
Easy: 0/0   Hard: 0/0
hide reset

Easy   Hard
New Number
Check Answers


 

 

Double:     Half:


Level/1 Forward, 9,10,11, Under 30 Seconds

Use this tool in Level/1 with, 9,10,11, fwd intervals, scoring under 30 seconds. Level/2 continues with subtraction and intervals from 6-14, all modes in under 30 seconds.

Instructors may challenge students to get faster as they develop base10 add and subtract skills. Perhaps posting a chart in a classroom with each student's fastest times on it. Students try to improve their times?

Sums Between 10 and 20

Fastest Times
Fwd - E: (99)   H: (99)
Bwd - E: (99)   H: (99)

hide

INTERVALDIRECTION
9-11 6-14 fwd bwd
      New


over 100


91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99

100


81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90
71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80
61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70
51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10

less than 1



 

Attempt/Correct
Dots:0/0   Digits:0/0
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Dots  Digits
New Answer














In Easy mode 10 shapes are generated and all are either: Square, Circle or Triangle.

In Hard mode 20 shapes are generated and there will be some Other shapes included.

Attempt / Correct
10:0/0     20:0/0
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10 Shapes   20 Shapes
NewAnswer

  Square 

  Circle  

Triangle  

  Other  

Matching Digits and Dots

Dots mode:

Hovering each dot allows students to make cognitive associations between physical quantities and abstract digits.


Digits mode:

A random number of consecutive dots are highlighted and students are asked to count them. Dots are grouped in rows of ten so the student learns counting by tens is faster than counting by ones.

Students learn about precision and magnitude when matching the exact amounts. Many students will complete these assignments the first time they try them.


Rounding to a Place → Two Things

1: All Digits to the Right of the Place become 0.

2: The Place Stays the Same or Increases by +1 → if the Digit to the Right is 5 or Greater.

Round 7483 to the nearest

10100 1000

74837480 75007000 Look at the 3 itis < 5 so the 8stays the sameLook at the 8 itis ≥ 5 so the 4increases to 5Look at the 4 itis < 5 so the 7stays the same

3 Examples

Print Worksheet/Key

Round to Nearest 10 100 1000

86727480555510 :   8670100 :   87001000 :   9000748075007000556056006000

Reset

Back to Rounding

This tool generates 5 numbers and students round each to the nearest 10 100 and 1000.

A How to Round tutorial animation may be helpful to students and useful to teachers.

New Numbers
Check Answers

Attempt/Correct
  10: 0 / 0
 100: 0 / 0
1000: 0 / 0

hide reset  


How to Round