📚 Learn 🎮 Games 📊 Place Value Chart 🔢 Number Expander 🧱 Base-10 Blocks 📝 Blog
📚 Learn 🎮 Games ✏️ Blog 📊 Place Value Chart 🔀 Number Expander 🧱 Base-10 Blocks
📚 Grade 3 · Ages 8–9

The Thousands Place

Step into 4-digit numbers — learn thousands, expanded form, and rounding!

Introduction

You've conquered hundreds. Now it's time to go bigger. In Grade 3 we add the thousands place, which lets us work with numbers all the way up to 9,999. You'll also learn to round numbers — a super useful skill for everyday life.

What You Will Learn

The Big Idea: The Thousands Place

Each place in a number is exactly 10 times bigger than the place to its right. This pattern never changes.

Think of it like stairs: Ones → Tens → Hundreds → Thousands. Each step up is ×10.

So 1,000 is ten times bigger than 100. One thousand = 10 hundreds = 100 tens = 1,000 ones.

Think of a school with 1,000 students. That's 10 classes of 100 students each. Or 100 groups of 10. Place value shows us all these connections!

💡 The Comma Rule

We write a comma after the thousands digit: 4,829 (not 4829). The comma helps our eyes find the thousands place instantly. It sits between the hundreds and thousands digits.

Place Value Table

Let's look at the number 3,847:

ThousandsHundredsTensOnes
3847

The 3 → thousands → worth 3,000
The 8 → hundreds → worth 800
The 4 → tens → worth 40
The 7 → ones → worth 7
3,847 = 3,000 + 800 + 40 + 7

Worked Examples

Example 1 — The number 5,263

5263
DigitPlace NameValue
5Thousands5,000
2Hundreds200
6Tens60
3Ones3

5,263 = 5,000 + 200 + 60 + 3  ✅

Example 2 — The number 7,050 (zeros as placeholders)

7050
DigitPlace NameValue
7Thousands7,000
0Hundreds0 (placeholder)
5Tens50
0Ones0 (placeholder)

7,050 = 7,000 + 50  ✅

Rounding Numbers

Rounding means finding the nearest 10, 100 or 1,000. It makes numbers easier to work with when you don't need an exact answer.

The rule: Look at the digit to the right of the place you are rounding to.

Example: Round 3,847 to the nearest 100. Look at the tens digit: 4. Since 4 < 5, round down. Answer: 3,800.

⭐ Golden Rules to Remember

1. Each place is 10 times bigger than the one to its right — always.
2. Zeros are placeholders — never leave them out from a number.
3. When rounding, always look at the digit one place to the right of where you are rounding.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

⚠️ Watch Out For These!

Mistake 1 — Forgetting the comma. Write 4829 as 4,829. The comma makes large numbers easier to read and helps identify the thousands digit.

Mistake 2 — Rounding the wrong digit. To round to the nearest 100, you change the hundreds digit — not the tens. Look right, change left.

Mistake 3 — Dropping zero placeholders. 7,050 is NOT 7,50 or 750. Zeros keep every digit in its correct place. Remove them and the number completely changes.

🧠 Quick Check — Try These!

Q1. In the number 6,394, what is the value of the digit 3?

A) 3    B) 30    C) 300

Answer: C — 300 (the 3 is in the hundreds place)

Q2. Round 4,762 to the nearest 100.

A) 4,700    B) 4,800    C) 5,000

Answer: B — 4,800 (tens digit is 6, so round up)

Q3. What is 2,000 + 500 + 8 in standard form?

A) 2,508    B) 2,580    C) 258

Answer: A — 2,508 (no tens, so zero placeholder needed)

🚀 What's Next?

Ready for millions? Head to Grade 4!