College and Career Ready Standards
5.OA.1: Use parentheses in numerical expressions and evaluate expressions with these symbols.
5.NBT.1: Recognize that in a multi-digit number, a digit in one place represents 10 times as much as it represents in the place to its right and 1/10 of what it represents in the place to its left.
Adding Whole Numbers and Decimals (Base-10 Blocks)
Cannonball Clowns (Number Line Estimation)
Cargo Captain (Multi-digit Subtraction)
Comparing and Ordering Decimals
Modeling Decimals (Area and Grid Models)
Modeling Whole Numbers and Decimals (Base-10 Blocks)
Rounding Whole Numbers (Number Line)
Subtracting Whole Numbers and Decimals (Base-10 Blocks)
Target Sum Card Game (Multi-digit Addition)
Treasure Hunter (Decimals on the Number Line)
Whole Numbers with Base-10 Blocks
5.NBT.3: Read, write, and compare decimals to thousandths.
5.NBT.3a: Read and write decimals to thousandths using base-ten numerals, number names, expanded form, and unit form (e.g., expanded form 47.392 = 4 x 10 + 7 x 1 + 3 x 1/10 + 9 x 1/100 + 2 x 1/1000; unit form 47.392 = 4 tens + 7 ones + 3 tenths + 9 hundredths + 2 thousandths).
Comparing and Ordering Decimals
Modeling Decimals (Area and Grid Models)
Modeling Whole Numbers and Decimals (Base-10 Blocks)
Treasure Hunter (Decimals on the Number Line)
5.NBT.3b: Compare two decimals to thousandths based on meanings of the digits in each place, using >, <, =, and not equal to relational symbols to record the results of comparisons.
Comparing and Ordering Decimals
Modeling Decimals (Area and Grid Models)
Modeling Whole Numbers and Decimals (Base-10 Blocks)
Treasure Hunter (Decimals on the Number Line)
5.NBT.6: Find whole-number quotients of whole numbers with up to four-digit dividends and two-digit divisors, using strategies based on place value, the properties of operations, and/or the relationship between multiplication and division. Illustrate and explain the calculation by using equations, rectangular arrays, and/or area models.
Critter Count (Modeling Multiplication)
Factor Trees (Factoring Numbers)
No Alien Left Behind (Division with Remainders)
Pattern Flip (Patterns)
5.NBT.7: Add, subtract, multiply, and divide decimals to hundredths, using concrete models or drawings and strategies based on place value, properties of operations, and/or the relationship between addition and subtraction; relate the strategy to a written method and explain the reasoning used.
Adding Whole Numbers and Decimals (Base-10 Blocks)
Multiplying Decimals (Area Model)
Multiplying with Decimals
Subtracting Whole Numbers and Decimals (Base-10 Blocks)
Sums and Differences with Decimals
5.NF.1: Add and subtract fractions with unlike denominators (including mixed numbers) by replacing given fractions with equivalent fractions in such a way as to produce an equivalent sum or difference of fractions with like denominators.
Adding Fractions (Fraction Tiles)
Fraction Artist 2 (Area Models of Fractions)
Fractions Greater than One (Fraction Tiles)
Fractions with Unlike Denominators
Modeling Fractions (Area Models)
5.NF.2: Solve word problems involving addition and subtraction of fractions referring to the same whole, including cases of unlike denominators, (e.g., by using visual fraction models or equations to represent the problem.) Use benchmark fractions and number sense of fractions to estimate mentally and assess the reasonableness of answers.
Fraction Artist 2 (Area Models of Fractions)
Fractions Greater than One (Fraction Tiles)
5.NF.3: Interpret a fraction as division of the numerator by the denominator (a/b = a ÷ b). Solve word problems involving division of whole numbers leading to answers in the form of fractions or mixed numbers, e.g., by using visual fraction models or equations to represent the problem.
Fraction Artist 1 (Area Models of Fractions)
5.MD.1: Convert among different-sized standard measurement units within a given measurement system (e.g., convert 5 cm to 0.05 m), and use these conversions in solving multi-step, real world problems.
Cannonball Clowns (Number Line Estimation)
5.MD.3: Recognize volume as an attribute of solid figures and understand concepts of volume measurement.
5.MD.3a: A cube with side length 1 unit, called a “unit cube,” is said to have “one cubic unit” of volume, and can be used to measure volume.
5.MD.3b: A solid figure which can be packed without gaps or overlaps using n unit cubes is said to have a volume of n cubic units.
5.MD.5: Relate volume to the operations of multiplication and addition and solve real world and mathematical problems involving volume.
5.MD.5a: Find the volume of a right rectangular prism with whole-number side lengths by packing it with unit cubes, and show that the volume is the same as would be found by multiplying the edge lengths, equivalently by multiplying the height by the area of the base. Represent three-dimensional whole-number products as volumes, (e.g., to represent the associative property of multiplication).
5.MD.5b: Apply the formulas V = l x w x h and V = B x h (B represents the area of the base) for rectangular prisms to find volumes of right rectangular prisms with whole-number edge lengths in the context of solving real world and mathematical problems.
5.G.1: Use a pair of perpendicular number lines, called axes, to define a coordinate system, with the intersection of the lines (the origin) arranged to coincide with the 0 on each line and a given point in the plane located by using an ordered pair of numbers, called its coordinates. Understand that the first number indicates how far to travel from the origin in the direction of one axis, and the second number indicates how far to travel in the direction of the second axis, with the convention that the names of the two axes and the coordinates correspond (e.g., x-axis and x-coordinate, y-axis and y-coordinate).
City Tour (Coordinates)
Elevator Operator (Line Graphs)
Function Machines 2 (Functions, Tables, and Graphs)
Function Machines 3 (Functions and Problem Solving)
Points in the Coordinate Plane
Points, Lines, and Equations
5.G.2: Represent real world and mathematical problems by graphing points in the first quadrant of the coordinate plane, and interpret coordinate values of points in the context of the situation (e.g., plotting the relationship between two positive quantities such as maps, coordinate grid games (such as Battleship), time/temperature, time/distance, cost/quantity, etc.).
City Tour (Coordinates)
Elevator Operator (Line Graphs)
Points in the Coordinate Plane
Points, Lines, and Equations
5.G.3: Understand that attributes belonging to a category of two-dimensional figures also belong to all subcategories of that category.
5.G.4: Classify two-dimensional figures in a hierarchy based on properties.
Correlation last revised: 9/15/2020