Summary
Students use place value knowledge to compare two 2-digit numbers. This game combines number sense with a little bit of luck.
Curriculum content
- Compare, order, read and represent numbers to 100
Materials
Card sets
- 1 set of Mathletics number cards 1 to 9 1-9
- Mathletics operation word cards ‘is more than’ and ‘is less than’
Concrete
How to play
Set up
- Arrange students into pairs.
- Place the ‘is more than’ and ‘is less than’ cards face up.
- Shuffle or mix up the cards and place them in a pile face down.
Rules
- Player 1 selects 2 number cards from the top and places them face up to create a 2-digit number. The player chooses the order of the digits.
- Then they select either the ‘is more than’ or ‘is less than’ card and place it beside the number.
- Player 1 then draws the next 2 number cards and creates a 2-digit number to complete the number sentence. Again, they can choose the order of the digits.
- If the sentence is correct, the player takes a counter or token. Player 2 can help identify if the statement is correct or not.
- Player 2 has a turn following the same rules.
- Players take turns.
- The first player to have 5 counters wins the game. Players should have equal turns before a winner is confirmed.
Note: students should take equal turns at playing as Player 1.
Variations
CHANGE it down
- Students have to place the number cards in the order they are drawn and choose the comparison card last.
- Have students play collaboratively to make correct number sentences. Together they accumulate as many counters as they can. Pairs can work collaboratively against other pairs.
CHANGE it up
- Use symbol cards < and > instead of word cards.
- Students select 3 number cards at a time to compare 3-digit numbers.
- Place the comparison cards face down so this element is chance.
What to look for
- Ensure students have a strong understanding of place value in constructing numbers using 2 number cards. Ask ‘Which is the tens digit?’ or ‘Which is the units/ones digit?’
- Listen for the correct use of mathematical language including more than and less than.
- Can students make informed decisions and justify their selections?
- Identify whether students can justify why a statement is correct or incorrect.