1.NBT.4: Adding Within 100
I can add within 100, including adding a two-digit number and a one-digit number, and adding a two-digit number and a multiple of 10.
What Your Child Needs to Know
This standard teaches your child to add numbers up to 100 using place value understanding. They learn to add problems like 23 + 4 (two-digit plus one-digit) and 34 + 20 (two-digit plus multiple of 10). First graders use concrete objects, drawings, and mental strategies rather than formal algorithms.
Children typically start with easier combinations (like adding 10 to any number) before moving to more complex problems. They learn that understanding tens and ones makes addition easier and more logical.
Real World Practice
Visual models and hands-on activitiesVisual Models
1. Base Ten Blocks
Use ten-rods and unit cubes. For 25 + 3, show 2 ten-rods and 5 units, then add 3 more units to get 2 ten-rods and 8 units (28).
2. Number Line Jumps
Draw a number line. For 34 + 20, start at 34 and make two jumps of 10 to land on 54.
3. Hundred Chart
Use a 1-100 chart. For adding 10, move down one row. For adding 1, move right one space.
4. Place Value Mat
Draw a mat with "Tens" and "Ones" columns. Show each number, then combine the columns to find the sum.
Everyday Activities
1. Shopping Math
At the store: "We have 23 apples and need 5 more. How many will we have?" Use real objects when possible.
2. Toy Collections
Count toys: "You have 15 cars and got 10 more for your birthday. How many cars do you have now?"
3. Sticker Charts
Use sticker reward charts: "You had 27 stickers and earned 6 more today. How many stickers total?"
4. Cooking Together
Measure ingredients: "We need 35 chocolate chips and 20 more. How many is that altogether?"
5. Game Scores
Keep score in games: "You had 42 points and just scored 8 more. What's your new total?"
Quick Checks
Strategies and quick activitiesStrategies When Your Child Struggles
1. Start with Multiples of 10
Begin with easier problems like 23 + 10 or 45 + 20. These build confidence and understanding.
2. Use the "Add Tens First" Strategy
For 34 + 25, think: "30 + 20 = 50, then 4 + 5 = 9, so 50 + 9 = 59."
3. Break Apart Numbers
For 27 + 8, think: "27 + 3 = 30, then 30 + 5 = 35" (breaking 8 into 3 + 5).
4. Use What They Know
Connect to facts they know: "You know 7 + 3 = 10, so 27 + 3 = 30."
5. Make it Concrete
Always use objects or drawings until the mental strategies become natural.
5-Minute Practice Activities
Activity 1: Add 10 Game
Call out numbers and have your child add 10: "25 plus 10 equals..." This builds mental math skills.
Activity 2: Two-Step Addition
For 36 + 7, say: "First add to the next ten: 36 + 4 = 40. Then add the rest: 40 + 3 = 43."
Activity 3: Story Problems
Create simple stories: "There were 28 birds in a tree. 6 more birds came. How many birds now?"
Activity 4: Number Line Hops
Draw a number line and practice "hopping" by tens and ones to solve addition problems.
Check Progress
Track improvementBy the middle of the year, your child should:
- Add 10 to any two-digit number mentally (23 + 10 = 33)
- Add single digits to two-digit numbers using objects or drawings
- Understand that adding doesn't change the tens place when adding small numbers
By the end of the year, your child should:
- Add two-digit numbers and multiples of 10 mentally (34 + 20 = 54)
- Add two-digit and one-digit numbers with and without regrouping
- Use multiple strategies (objects, drawings, mental math) to solve problems
- Explain their thinking when solving addition problems
Simple Assessment:
Give your child problems like 25 + 4 and 37 + 20. Watch their strategy and ask them to explain.
Ask: "How would you solve 28 + 6?" Look for logical thinking and place value understanding.
Present a story problem: "You have 35 stickers and get 8 more. How many do you have now?"
Differentiation
Support for all learning levelsBelow Grade Level
If your child is struggling with addition within 100, these resources focus on building foundational skills with smaller numbers and concrete support.
📥 Download Practice WorksheetAt Grade Level
These resources provide practice at the first grade level, focusing on adding within 100 using place value strategies.
📥 Download Grade Level WorksheetAbove Grade Level
If your child has mastered basic addition within 100, these resources extend their learning with more challenging addition concepts.
📥 Download Challenge Worksheet