Place Value: Tens and Ones
Numbers and Counting
Understanding that a two-digit number is made of tens and ones. For example, 34 = 3 tens and 4 ones.
Learning Material
4 pagesUnderstanding Tens and Ones
Understanding Tens and Ones
In math, every digit (number symbol) has a place value — a value that depends on where it sits in a number. In two-digit numbers, there are two places: the tens place and the ones place.
What Are Tens?#
A ten is a group of 10 ones bundled together. Think of ten single sticks tied into one bundle. That bundle represents 1 ten.
- 1 ten = 10 ones
- 2 tens = 20 ones
- 3 tens = 30 ones
- 5 tens = 50 ones
What Are Ones?#
Ones are single units — just 1 each. They do not form a full group of ten.
For example, if you have 3 tens and 4 loose ones, you have: 3 × 10 + 4 = 34
The Place Value Chart#
A place value chart shows you which digit is in which place:
| Tens | Ones |
|---|---|
| 3 | 4 |
This shows the number 34: 3 tens and 4 ones.
Let's try a few more:
- 52: 5 tens, 2 ones (50 + 2 = 52)
- 71: 7 tens, 1 one (70 + 1 = 71)
- 90: 9 tens, 0 ones (90 + 0 = 90)
- 17: 1 ten, 7 ones (10 + 7 = 17)
Using Base Ten Blocks#
A great way to see place value is with base ten blocks:
- A long flat strip represents 1 ten (10 little cubes in a row)
- A tiny cube represents 1 one
To show the number 43, you would use 4 ten-strips and 3 tiny cubes.
Place value is one of the most important ideas in math. Once you understand it, adding and subtracting large numbers becomes much easier!