What students practice
Use LearnTiles to turn base-ten blocks, expanded form, rounding, and comparing numbers into short, mobile-friendly lessons students can play from a class code.
Best fit
1st GradeBuild place value games as a focused Deck with self-checking Tiles.2nd GradeBuild place value games as a focused Deck with self-checking Tiles.3rd GradeBuild place value games as a focused Deck with self-checking Tiles.4th GradeBuild place value games as a focused Deck with self-checking Tiles.Choose a classroom path
How to build this Deck
Choose the target
Choose one part of base-ten blocks, expanded form, rounding, and comparing numbers and keep the first Deck short enough for a warmup, center, or exit ticket.
Try the builderPick the Tile mix
Mix multiple choice, matching, and one explanation Tile so students practice the skill and show enough thinking for you to respond.
Try the builderUse the results
Use the report to copy the Deck into a reteach version, an extension version, or a quick review for the next group.
Plan reteach useLesson ideas
Morning warmup
Start with a quick warmup that checks the easiest place value games skill before students move on.
Use for centersMosaic review
Create a Mosaic Deck where each correct answer reveals part of a picture while students practice base-ten blocks, expanded form, rounding, and comparing numbers.
Use for small groupsExit ticket
End with an exit Ticket that asks students to explain one strategy or choose the best example.
Use for interventionPlay Modes that fit
Related pages
Questions teachers ask
What grades are best for place value games?
Place value games work well for 1st grade, 2nd grade, 3rd grade, 4th grade. Teachers can simplify prompts for early learners or add written explanations for older students.
Can I use place value games in centers?
Yes. Build a short lesson with 8 to 12 Tiles, assign it with a class code, and reuse it for small-group rotations, review, or quick checks.
What can students practice in a place value games lesson?
A good lesson can cover base-ten blocks, expanded form, rounding, and comparing numbers with quick feedback and a mix of interactive Tile formats.
Build a place value games for k-5 lessons lesson
Start with a small skill, add a few interactive Tiles, and share it with a class code.