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ROCK FALL
PLAY
Click / tap on each falling rock. Answer the question in the box as quickly as you can.
There are only 4 questions in this game so it is quite short... if you can get those rocks!

Your final score is based on number of questions answered right / wrong, and the time taken.
...

Game: ROCK FALL

Aim: Smash all the falling rocks

Method:
Click / tap on each falling rock. Answer the question in the box as quickly as you can.
There are only 4 questions in this game so it is quite short... if you can get those rocks!

Your final score is based on number of questions answered right / wrong, and the time taken.

Decimal numbers: ascending
      
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ROCK FALL game to practice
'Decimal numbers: ascending' for 3rd grade

Order decimal numbers in ascending order (from smallest to largest)

To arrange decimal numbers in ascending order you need to know 2 things:

Decimal numbers

A decimal number has two parts: the whole number part and the decimal part. The whole number part comes before the decimal point, and the decimal part comes after it. For example, in the number 5.32, the whole number part is 5, and the decimal part is 32.

Ascending order

To arrange numbers in ascending order is to arrange the numbers from smallest on the left to biggest on the right. In ascending order, the numbers 3, 2, 4, 1 are 1, 2, 3, 4.


To arrange decimal numbers in ascending order, follow these steps.

Step 1: Compare the whole numbers first. When you're trying to arrange decimal numbers, start by comparing their whole number parts. The smaller the whole number, the smaller the decimal number. For example, 2.5 is smaller than 3.2 because 2 is smaller than 3.

Step 2: Compare decimal parts if the whole numbers are equal. If two decimal numbers have the same whole number part, then you need to compare their decimal parts. Look at each digit in the decimal part, starting from the left, and compare them. The smaller the digit, the smaller the decimal number.

For example, let's compare 4.21 and 4.15: The first digits are 2 (from 4.21) and 1 (from 4.15). Since 1 is smaller than 2, 4.15 is smaller than 4.21 even though it's second digit is bigger.


Let's arrange these numbers in ascending order: 3.6, 1.8, 3.45, 1.15, 2.2.

First, arrange them by whole number parts: 1.8, 1.15, 2.2, 3.6, 3.45.

Now, compare the decimal parts of numbers with the same whole number part: 1.15 is smaller than 1.8, and 3.45 is smaller than 3.6.

The final ascending order is: 1.15, 1.8, 2.2, 3.45, 3.6.

With our Rock fall math game you will be practicing the topic "Decimal numbers: ascending" from 3rd grade / Comparing numbers / Order decimal numbers. The math in this game consists of 16 questions that ask you to choose the correct ascending order for these lists of 4 decimal numbers.

Click / tap on rocks and answer math questions to win the game

Large thumbnail for math game Rock fall

ROCK FALL is based on the road traffic warning sign for falling rocks - a sign that seems a bit less useful than somebody getting up there on that cliff and actually doing something about it... Anyway, the rocks are falling and it is your job to stop them hitting the road below, or at least stopping them hitting the road below too many times and breaking it. Smash the rocks by clicking or tapping on them (not so easy in real life of course) - they will turn into snowflakes and float gently down into nothing.

There are 4 rocks to stop and not much time to do it (if you want to get a good score and get on the leaderboard). This game is fun and fast and requires good reflexes and a good strategy. Plan to break the smaller rocks first if you want a good score because the rocks fall faster as the game progresses. It also helps to decide where on their path you plan to click / tap the rocks.

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How to play ROCK FALL to practice
'Decimal numbers: ascending' for 3rd grade

Free Math Games screenshot of Rock fall game for elementary

There are rocks falling from an unstable cliff. You need to break the rocks by clicking / tapping on them...

  1. Press "PLAY" on the settings page to open the game page.
  2. There is a short countdown before the game starts.
  3. Rocks start falling from the cliff.
  4. Click or tap on a rock to break it into a snowflake - a question box will open with up to 4 multiple choice answers or an on-screen keyboard.
  5. Enter or click/tap the correct math answer to close the question box.
  6. Rocks fall faster as the game progresses.
  7. Clear all the rocks to finish the game.
  8. It is a good idea to hit the small rock first as it gets much harder if you leave it until later.
  9. This is a timed game and your score is calculated by adding 10 seconds for each wrong answer to your game time.
  10. If you get one of the 10 best times for the topic you can add your name to the leaderboard for your chosen topic.
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