4nf7 Worksheets
Number and Operations—Fractions
Understand decimal notation for fractions, and compare decimal fractions.
7Compare two decimals to hundredths by reasoning about their size. Recognize that comparisons are valid only when the two decimals refer to the same whole. Record the results of comparisons with the symbols >, =, or <, and justify the conclusions, e.g., by using a visual model.
4nf7
4nf7

- Compare two decimals to see which one is greater, less, or if they are equal.
- Use place value (ones, tenths, hundredths) to decide which decimal is bigger.
- Line up decimal points and add zeros when needed so two decimals are easy to compare.
- Choose the correct symbol (<, >, or =) to show the comparison.
4nf7

- Compare two decimals and decide which one is greater or less.
- Use place value to compare decimals by looking at tenths, hundredths, and thousandths.
- Line up decimal points to make fair comparisons between numbers.
4nf7

- Compare two decimal numbers and decide which one is greater, less, or equal.
- Use place value (ones, tenths, hundredths) to explain why one decimal is bigger than another.
- Notice that decimals with different numbers of digits can still be compared by lining up the decimal points.
4nf7

- Compare decimals to the hundredths place to decide which is greater or less.
- Put a set of decimals in order from least to greatest or greatest to least.
- Use place value (ones, tenths, hundredths) to explain why one decimal comes before another.
- Notice that trailing zeros don’t change a decimal’s value (like 2.5 and 2.50) when ordering numbers.
4nf7

- Put decimal numbers in order from least to greatest or greatest to least.
- Compare two decimals and decide which one is larger or smaller.
- Use place value (ones, tenths, hundredths) to tell decimals apart.
- Line up decimal points to compare numbers correctly, including numbers with zeros.
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- Compare money amounts that have the same number of dollars but different cents.
- Put prices in order from least to greatest or greatest to least by looking at the cents.
- Use place value to decide which amount is larger when the dollars match.
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- Compare two money amounts written with dollars and cents to see which is greater or less.
- Put several prices in order from least to greatest or greatest to least.
- Read and understand money written as decimals (like $3.45) and match it to dollars and cents.
- Use place value in decimals to compare amounts correctly, even when both the dollars and cents are different.