Regrouping Hundreds, Tens, and Ones
Regrouping Hundreds, Tens, and Ones
In math, numbers are grouped into hundreds, tens, and ones. But what happens when you have too many ones or too many tens? You regroup! Regrouping (sometimes called trading) is the secret trick you use when carrying in addition or borrowing in subtraction.
The Magic Rule of 10
Our number system is based on the number 10. The most important rule to remember is:
- 10 ones = 1 ten
- 10 tens = 1 hundred
Whenever you have 10 or more in any place value, you can bundle them up and trade them for the next biggest size!
Regrouping Ones into Tens
Let's look at an example: 3 hundreds, 5 tens, and 12 ones.
We cannot have 12 ones in the ones place! Since 12 is greater than 10, we need to regroup.
- Take 10 of those ones and trade them for 1 ten.
- You are left with 2 ones.
- Add the new ten to the 5 tens you already had: 5+1=6 tens.
Answer: 3 hundreds, 6 tens, 2 ones (which is the number 362).
Regrouping Tens into Hundreds
What if you have too many tens? Let's try: 2 hundreds, 14 tens.
We cannot keep 14 tens in the tens place.
- Take 10 of those tens and trade them for 1 hundred.
- You are left with 4 tens.
- Add the new hundred to the 2 hundreds you already had: 2+1=3 hundreds.
Answer: 3 hundreds, 4 tens, 0 ones (which is the number 340).
Making Numbers in Different Ways
Because we can trade back and forth, the same number can be written in many different ways. Let's look at the number 243.
- Standard way: 2 hundreds, 4 tens, 3 ones
- Trade 1 ten for 10 ones: 2 hundreds, 3 tens, 13 ones
- Trade 1 hundred for 10 tens: 1 hundred, 14 tens, 3 ones
Understanding how to break apart and build numbers like this makes adding and subtracting big numbers a breeze!