Mountain Peak Place Value Adventures

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Math Grade 2 Mountains Theme
What's inside this worksheet
Grade 2 Math worksheet preview — Place Value
Questions
Answer key — Grade 2 Math worksheet
Answer Key · Teacher Use

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8 questions with a Mountains theme plus a full answer key. Perfect for Grade 2 Math.

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SubjectMath
GradeGrade 2
TopicPlace Value
Created by Examel Education Team · Aligned to Common Core State Standards
What is included
8 curriculum-aligned questions
Full answer key for parents and teachers
Mountains theme to keep kids engaged
Print-ready PDF — US Letter size
Name, date, and score fields included
How to Use This Worksheet
1
Print
Download the PDF and print on US Letter paper.
2
Review
Read through the questions with your child or student.
3
Complete
Let them work independently. Use the answer key to check.
4
Extend
Try a related worksheet to reinforce the skill.

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About this Math worksheet for Grade 2

Grade 2 Math: Mountain Peak Place Value Adventures free printable worksheet with answer key.

This printable Math worksheet is designed for Grade 2 students and covers Place Value. The Mountains theme keeps kids engaged while they practice essential Math skills. Every worksheet includes a full answer key making it easy for parents and teachers to check work instantly. Aligned to Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for Grade 2 Math. Print-ready at US Letter size. No login required — download and print in seconds.

Last updated: March 2026

Why Place Value matters in Grade 2

Place value is the foundation of all math your child will learn in Grade 2 and beyond. When children understand that the digit 3 in the number 32 means "3 tens" (not just "3"), they're building the mental framework needed for addition, subtraction, and eventually multiplication. At ages 7-8, students are developmentally ready to see numbers as groups rather than just counting individual objects. This shift from concrete counting to abstract thinking is huge. Mastering place value means your child can tackle two-digit addition without counting on their fingers every time, solve word problems more confidently, and understand why carrying works when adding 25 + 18. It's the bridge between early counting skills and number sense that keeps growing through upper elementary.

What your student will practice

Common mistakes to watch for

The most common error is when students confuse digit position with the digit itself—they'll say "the 3 in 34 is bigger than the 7 in 27" because 3 > 7, ignoring place value entirely. You'll spot this when they compare numbers without thinking about tens first, or when they write "4 tens and 5 ones" as "54" correctly but can't explain why 40 is different from 4. Another frequent pattern: students reverse digits, writing 72 when you say "7 tens and 2 ones," or they struggle to show 30 + 4 because they don't yet see that 34 *is* 30 + 4.

Teacher & Parent Tip

Play a simple "number detective" game at home using objects like coins, pasta, or blocks. Say a two-digit number like 47, and have your child make it using 4 groups of 10 (even if it's 10 pennies bundled by a rubber band) and 7 single items. Then take it apart: "How many tens? How many ones?" Do this with numbers they use daily—like their street address or parent's age. This hands-on grouping is exactly what they need to move from pictures on paper to real mental understanding, and it makes place value sticky in a way worksheets alone cannot.

About Examel

Examel provides 10,000+ printable worksheets for Grades 1–6, aligned to Common Core State Standards. Every worksheet is reviewed for accuracy and includes a full answer key. New worksheets added weekly across Math, English, and Science. Built by educators for parents, teachers, and homeschool families.