Comparing and Ordering 3-Digit Numbers
Comparing and Ordering Three-Digit Numbers
When we look at numbers up to 1,000, we often need to figure out which number is bigger, which is smaller, or if they are exactly the same. We do this by looking at the place value of their digits.
The Comparing Symbols
We use three special math symbols to compare numbers:
- Greater than (>): The open side faces the bigger number. (Example: 5>3)
- Less than (<): The pointy side points to the smaller number. (Example: 2<4)
- Equal to (=): The numbers are exactly the same. (Example: 7=7)
Tip: Think of the > and < signs as a hungry alligator's mouth. The alligator always wants to eat the bigger number!
How to Compare Three-Digit Numbers
To compare numbers like 345 and 354, we check the digits from left to right: Hundreds, Tens, then Ones.
- Compare the Hundreds: Look at the first digit. The number with the bigger hundreds digit is greater.
- Example: 412>299 because 4 hundreds is more than 2 hundreds.
- Compare the Tens: If the hundreds are the same, look at the middle digit.
- Example: Which is greater, 789 or 798? Both have 7 hundreds. Next, look at the tens: 8 tens is less than 9 tens. So, 798>789.
- Compare the Ones: If both the hundreds and tens are the same, look at the last digit.
- Example: Compare 345 and 348. Both have 3 hundreds and 4 tens. Since 5<8, we know that 345<348.
Ordering Numbers
Once you know how to compare two numbers, you can order a whole group of them! You can put them in order from least to greatest (smallest to biggest) or greatest to least (biggest to smallest).
Example: Order 521, 512, and 251 from least to greatest.
- Find the smallest number first. Look at the hundreds: 5, 5, and 2. The number 251 has the smallest hundreds digit, so it goes first.
- Now compare the remaining numbers: 521 and 512. Both have 5 hundreds. Look at the tens: 1 ten is less than 2 tens, so 512 is smaller than 521.
- Put them in order: 251,512,521.