Expanded Form
Interactive worksheet with auto-grading, instant feedback, and printable PDF.
- Format
- Interactive (Online), Printable (PDF)
- Grades
- 2
- Subjects
- math
- Standards
- 2.NBT.A.1.A2.NBT.A.1.B2.NBT.A.3
What's included
About this worksheet
This interactive and printable worksheet on Expanded Form is designed to help students learn and practice the concept of representing numbers in their expanded form. It provides a structured format for students to write given numbers in their expanded form, breaking them down into their respective place values.
The worksheet presents a series of numbers, ranging from three-digit to four-digit values. Students are tasked with analyzing each number and expressing it as the sum of its place value components. By working through these examples, students solidify their understanding of place value and gain proficiency in using expanded form notation.
What will your child learn through this worksheet?
- Identify the place values of digits in multi-digit numbers
- Represent numbers as the sum of their place value components
- Develop a deeper understanding of the base-10 number system
- Practice decomposing numbers into their expanded form
Learning Outcomes
Cognitive
- Analyze multi-digit numbers to identify their place values
- Apply the concept of expanded form to represent numbers
- Demonstrate an understanding of the base-10 number system
Psychomotor
- Practice writing numbers in expanded form notation
- Develop skills in decomposing numbers into their place value components
Affective
- Build confidence in working with multi-digit numbers
- Appreciate the importance of place value in the number system
Interpersonal/Social
- Collaborate with peers to discuss and explain expanded form representations
- Communicate their understanding of expanded form clearly
Tags
Expanded Form, Place Value, Base-10 Number System, Multi-digit Numbers, Cognitive, Psychomotor, Affective, Interpersonal/Social
Common Core standards covered
100 can be thought of as a bundle of ten tens — called a "hundred."
The numbers 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900 refer to one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, or nine hundreds (and 0 tens and 0 ones).
Read and write numbers to 1000 using base-ten numerals, number names, and expanded form.
Perfect for the way you teach
- Assign in one click
- Track progress per student
- Auto-graded results
- Practice at home
- Print or do on-screen
- Build skill mastery
- Standards-aligned
- Self-paced
- Ready-to-use today



