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Lesson 10 ~25 min Unit 1 · Decimals +85 XP

Decimals: Place Value and Rounding

Every digit has a place. Tenths, hundredths, thousandths. Know the value, compare with confidence, round with precision.

Today’s hook: Which is bigger: 0.4 or 0.39? It’s not about more digits — it’s about place value. 0.4 = 0.40, which is clearly more than 0.39. Let’s master the decimal system.
0/5QUESTS
Think First
warm-up

Before you read on — quickly: Write these decimals in order from smallest to largest: 0.7, 0.07, 0.707, 0.77. What strategy did you use?

Record your answer in your workbook.
1
The Big Idea
+5 XP

Decimal place value extends the number system to the right of the decimal point. Each position is 10 times smaller than the one to its left. Tenths ($ rac{1}{10}$), hundredths ($ rac{1}{100}$), thousandths ($ rac{1}{1000}$). Understanding place value lets you compare, order, and round decimals with confidence.

In 34.527: the 3 is in the tens place (30), the 4 is in the ones place (4), the 5 is in the tenths place ($ rac{5}{10}$), the 2 is in the hundredths place ($ rac{2}{100}$), and the 7 is in the thousandths place ($ rac{7}{1000}$). Each digit’s value depends entirely on its position.

3 4 . 5 2 7 Tens Ones Tenths Hundredths Thousandths 30 4 0.5 0.02 0.007 Each column is 10× smaller 34.527 = 30 + 4 + 0.5 + 0.02 + 0.007
$34.527 = 3 imes 10 + 4 imes 1 + 5 imes 0.1 + 2 imes 0.01 + 7 imes 0.001$
The decimal point
Separates whole numbers from fractions. Everything right is < 1.
10 times smaller
Each step right divides by 10. Tenths, hundredths, thousandths.
Leading zeros
0.4 and 0.40 are the same. Extra zeros don’t change the value.
2
What You’ll Master
objectives

Know

  • Place values to the right of the decimal point
  • Decimals are fractions with powers of 10 denominators
  • Rounding rules: look at the next digit

Understand

  • Why 0.4 = 0.40 = 0.400 (trailing zeros)
  • Why more digits doesn’t always mean a bigger number
  • How rounding approximates while keeping accuracy

Can Do

  • Compare and order decimals
  • Convert between decimals and fractions
  • Round to any decimal place
3
Words You Need
vocabulary
TenthsThe first digit after the decimal point. 0.1 = 1/10.
HundredthsThe second digit after the decimal point. 0.01 = 1/100.
ThousandthsThe third digit after the decimal point. 0.001 = 1/1000.
Place valueThe value of a digit based on its position in the number.
RoundingApproximating a number to a specified degree of accuracy.
Significant figureA digit that contributes to the precision of a number. The first non-zero digit and all digits after it.
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Spot the Trap
heads-up

Wrong: “0.37 is bigger than 0.4 because 37 > 4.” No! Compare digit by digit from the left. 0.4 = 0.40, and 40 > 37.

Right: Write both with the same number of decimal places. 0.4 = 0.40. Now compare: 40 > 37, so 0.4 > 0.37.

Wrong: Rounding 2.345 to 2 decimal places = 2.35. No! Look at the third decimal digit (5). Since 5 ≥ 5, round the 4 up to 5. So 2.35.

Right: Rounding 2.345 to 2 decimal places: look at the third digit (5). 5 ≥ 5, so round 4 up to 5. Answer = 2.35. Wait, that’s the same! Let me try again: 2.344 to 2 d.p. = 2.34 (4 < 5, so 4 stays).

5
Comparing Decimals
+5 XP

To compare decimals, write them with the same number of decimal places, then compare digit by digit from left to right. Add trailing zeros if needed — they don’t change the value.

Which is bigger: 0.608 or 0.62? Write 0.62 as 0.620. Now compare: tenths are both 6 (equal). Hundredths: 0 vs 2. Since 2 > 0, 0.62 > 0.608. You don’t need to look at the thousandths place once you find a difference.

Compare digit by digit 0.608 vs 0.620 0 = 0 6 = 6 0 < 2 0 < 2, so we’re done! 0.608 < 0.62
$0.62 = 0.620 \gt 0.608$ because hundredths digit $2 > 0$
Add trailing zeros
Write all decimals with the same number of places. Then compare.
Left to right
Compare tenths first, then hundredths, then thousandths.
Stop at first difference
Once you find a different digit, you know which is bigger.
6
Rounding Decimals
+5 XP

To round to a given decimal place: (1) Find the digit in the target place. (2) Look at the digit immediately to its right. (3) If that digit is 5 or more, round up. If less than 5, leave it. (4) Drop all digits after the target place.

Round 3.8472 to 2 decimal places. Target digit: 4 (hundredths). Next digit: 7. Since 7 ≥ 5, round 4 up to 5. Answer: 3.85. To 1 decimal place: target digit is 8, next digit is 4, 4 < 5, so answer = 3.8.

3.8472 → 2 d.p. Target digit (hundredths) is 4 3 . 8 4 7 2 Next digit is 7 (5 or more) So round 4 UP to 5 = 3.85
$3.8472 pprox 3.85$ (2 d.p.)   and   $3.8472 pprox 3.8$ (1 d.p.)
Find the target digit
Identify which decimal place you’re rounding to.
Look right
The next digit tells you whether to round up or stay.
5 or more rounds up
0-4: keep the same. 5-9: round up by 1.
7
Decimals and Fractions
+5 XP

Decimals are just fractions with denominators that are powers of 10. Converting between them is straightforward once you know the place values.

Convert 0.375 to a fraction. 0.375 = $ rac{3}{10} + rac{7}{100} + rac{5}{1000} = rac{375}{1000}$. Simplify: HCF(375, 1000) = 125. $ rac{375 \div 125}{1000 \div 125} = rac{3}{8}$. Convert $ rac{7}{20}$ to a decimal: $ rac{7}{20} = rac{7 imes 5}{20 imes 5} = rac{35}{100} = 0.35$.

Decimal ↔ Fraction 0.375 = 375/1000 = 3/8 (after ÷125) 7/20 = 35/100 = 0.35 Denominator must be power of 10 for easy decimal conversion
$0.375 = rac{3}{8}$   and   $ rac{7}{20} = 0.35$
Read the places
0.47 = 47 hundredths = 47/100.
Convert to /100 or /1000
Make the denominator a power of 10, then write as decimal.
Common ones to know
1/2=0.5, 1/4=0.25, 3/4=0.75, 1/5=0.2, 1/8=0.125
Watch Me Solve It · 3 examples
step-by-step
Example 1: Ordering decimals

Write in order from smallest to largest: 0.45, 0.405, 0.5, 0.045

Write all with 3 decimal places: 0.450, 0.405, 0.500, 0.045.

Compare digit by digit. Tenths: 0, 4, 4, 5. So 0.045 is smallest, 0.5 is largest. For 0.450 and 0.405: hundredths 5 > 0, so 0.405 < 0.450.

Final order: 0.045 < 0.405 < 0.45 < 0.5.

0.045, 0.405, 0.45, 0.5

Example 2: Rounding

Round 6.8495 to (a) 1 decimal place, (b) 2 decimal places, (c) 3 significant figures.

(a) 1 d.p.: target digit is 8, next digit is 4. 4 < 5, so 8 stays. 6.8.

(b) 2 d.p.: target digit is 4, next digit is 9. 9 ≥ 5, so round 4 up to 5. 6.85.

(c) 3 sig figs: first 3 non-zero digits are 6, 8, 4. Next digit is 9. 9 ≥ 5, round 4 up to 5. 6.85 (3 sig figs).

Example 3: Fraction to decimal

Convert $\frac{5}{8}$ to a decimal.

Method: convert to equivalent fraction with denominator 1000. 8 × 125 = 1000, so multiply top and bottom by 125.

$\frac{5}{8} = \frac{5 \times 125}{8 \times 125} = \frac{625}{1000} = 0.625$.

Check: 0.625 = $\frac{6}{10} + \frac{2}{100} + \frac{5}{1000} = \frac{625}{1000}$. Simplify: HCF(625, 1000) = 125. $\frac{625 \div 125}{1000 \div 125} = \frac{5}{8}$. Correct!

$\frac{5}{8} = 0.625$

Common Pitfalls
avoid these

Mistake: “0.5 < 0.45 because 5 < 45.” No! 0.5 = 0.50, and 50 > 45. The number of digits does not determine size.

Fix: Write both with the same decimal places: 0.50 vs 0.45. Tenths: 5 > 4, so 0.5 > 0.45.

Mistake: Rounding 2.498 to 2 d.p. = 2.50 but writing 2.5. Keep the trailing zero to show precision!

Fix: 2.498 ≈ 2.50 (2 d.p.). The zero is important — it shows we rounded to hundredths.

Mistake: Converting $\frac{1}{3}$ to 0.3 exactly. $\frac{1}{3}$ = 0.3333... forever. It never terminates!

Fix: $\frac{1}{3} \approx 0.333$ (3 d.p.) or exactly $\frac{1}{3}$. Some fractions have recurring decimals.

Copy Into Your Books
essential notes
1
Tenths = 1st digit after point, hundredths = 2nd, thousandths = 3rd.
2
Compare: write same decimal places, compare left to right.
3
Round: find target digit, look right, 5+ rounds up.
4
Fraction → decimal: make denominator 10, 100, or 1000.

How are you completing this lesson?

D
Brain Trainer · Decimals
4 problems

Four drill problems to build your decimal fluency. Work each, then reveal the answer.

  1. 1 Order from smallest to largest: 0.6, 0.06, 0.66, 0.606

    Write as 0.600, 0.060, 0.660, 0.606. Compare: 0.060 < 0.600 < 0.606 < 0.660.0.06, 0.6, 0.606, 0.66
  2. 2 Round 4.7382 to (a) 1 d.p. (b) 2 d.p.

    (a) Target 7, next digit 3 (less than 5), so 4.7. (b) Target 3, next digit 8 (5+), round up: 4.74.(a) 4.7 (b) 4.74
  3. 3 Convert $\frac{3}{8}$ to a decimal.

    3/8 = (3 × 125)/(8 × 125) = 375/1000 = 0.375.0.375
  4. 4 Convert 0.65 to a fraction in simplest form.

    0.65 = 65/100 = 13/20 (HCF = 5).13/20
Complete in your workbook.
1
Which is larger: 0.4 or 0.07?
+10 XP
2
Round 3.476 to 2 decimal places
+10 XP
3
$\frac{3}{5}$ as a decimal is:
+10 XP
4
Order smallest first: 0.5, 0.05, 0.505, 0.55
+10 XP
5
0.125 as a fraction in simplest form is:
+10 XP
Show Your Working
10 marks total
ApplyEasy3 MARKS

Q6. In the number 807.354: (a) What is the value of the 8? (b) What is the value of the 5? (c) What is the value of the 4?

Answer in your workbook.
ApplyMedium4 MARKS

Q7. Round 9.996 to (a) 1 decimal place, (b) 2 decimal places, (c) the nearest whole number, (d) 1 significant figure. Show your working for each.

Answer in your workbook.
ReasonMedium3 MARKS

Q8. A student says 0.6 and 0.60 are different numbers because one has more digits. Explain why this is incorrect, and describe a real-world situation where writing 0.60 matters.

Answer in your workbook.
Comprehensive Answers

Quick Check

1. B — 0.4 = 0.40, 0.07 = 0.07. 40 > 7, so 0.4 > 0.07.

2. C — Target 7, next digit 6 (5+), so 3.48.

3. A — 3/5 = 6/10 = 0.6.

4. D — 0.050 < 0.500 < 0.505 < 0.550.

5. B — 0.125 = 125/1000 = 1/8 (HCF = 125).

Show Your Working Model Answers

Q6 (3 marks): (a) 8 is in hundreds place, value = 800 [1]. (b) 5 is in hundredths place, value = 0.05 or 5/100 [1]. (c) 4 is in thousandths place, value = 0.004 or 4/1000 [1].

Q7 (4 marks): (a) 10.0 (9 rounds up, carrying over) [1]. (b) 10.00 [1]. (c) 10 [1]. (d) 10 [1].

Q8 (3 marks): 0.6 = 0.60 = 6/10 = 60/100, same value [1]. The extra zero shows precision [1]. Example: money ($0.60), measurements (0.60 m shows precision to cm) [1].

Stretch Challenge · +25 XP, +10 coins

The Recurring Detective

Some fractions have decimals that go on forever. $\frac{1}{3} = 0.333...$ and $\frac{1}{7} = 0.142857142857...$ These are called recurring decimals. Using a calculator, find the decimal for $\frac{2}{7}$, $\frac{3}{7}$, $\frac{4}{7}$, $\frac{5}{7}$, and $\frac{6}{7}$. What pattern do you notice? Can you predict $\frac{7}{7}$ without calculating?

Reveal solution

$\frac{2}{7} = 0.\overline{285714}$, $\frac{3}{7} = 0.\overline{428571}$, $\frac{4}{7} = 0.\overline{571428}$, $\frac{5}{7} = 0.\overline{714285}$, $\frac{6}{7} = 0.\overline{857142}$. All use the same 6 digits (142857) in the same cyclic order! $\frac{7}{7} = 1$ exactly.

R
Quick Review

Tenths

1st digit after point

Hundredths

2nd digit after point

Thousandths

3rd digit after point

Compare

Same decimal places, left to right

Round

Target digit, look right, 5+ rounds up

Trailing zeros

Don’t change value but show precision

Interactive: FDP Triple Match

Match the fraction, decimal, and percentage that represent the same value. Three cards, one value — can you find all the triples?

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