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8 questions with a Superheroes theme plus a full answer key. Perfect for Grade 2 Math.
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Grade 2 math place value worksheet. Free printable superhero-themed activity teaching tens and ones. Includes answer key.
This printable Math worksheet is designed for Grade 2 students and covers Place Value. The Superheroes 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
Place value is the foundation your second grader needs to become a confident mathematician. Right now, at ages 7-8, children are developmentally ready to understand that the number 24 isn't just "twenty-four"—it's 2 tens and 4 ones. This insight transforms how they add, subtract, and think about numbers. Without solid place value understanding, students struggle with two-digit addition, regrouping, and even reading numbers aloud correctly. When kids grasp that position matters—that the same digit "5" means something completely different in 5 versus 50—they're building mental math skills they'll use through multiplication, division, and beyond. These worksheets help your child see tens and ones as concrete groups, not just abstract symbols on a page.
Second graders often reverse digits or ignore place value entirely—saying 24 is "4 tens and 2 ones" or treating 24 and 42 as interchangeable. Another common error is writing expanded form incorrectly, like writing 24 as "2 + 4" instead of "20 + 4." You'll spot this when your child reads numbers backward, struggles to tell you which is bigger between 37 and 73, or gets frustrated with two-digit addition because they don't see the tens group. These mistakes signal they need more hands-on practice bundling and unbundling groups of ten.
Take your child on a "tens hunt" at home using objects they love—snack crackers, building blocks, or coins. Ask them to bundle 10 items into one group, then count loose items left over. Say, "I have 3 bundles of ten crackers and 5 loose ones. What number is that?" Do this weekly with different quantities (up to 9 tens) so they physically experience that 10 ones equals 1 ten. This tactile, playful practice embeds place value thinking better than any worksheet alone.
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