🏁 Ordinal Numbers – The Race Ranking Game

Welcome to the Number Race! Today you will learn how to describe position in a line or competition. These are called ordinal numbers.

Instead of counting how many, we are learning position — who is first, second, third, and so on.

📌 What are Ordinal Numbers?

Ordinal numbers tell us order or rank.

🏃 Race Story

Five children are running a race:

Anna, Marko, Luka, Sara, and Ivana

Luka finishes first. Sara is second. Marko is third. Ivana is fourth. Anna is fifth.

Question: Who is 3rd? ___

🎯 Mission 1 – Who is in Position?

  1. 1st place = ___
  2. 2nd place = ___
  3. 3rd place = ___
  4. 4th place = ___
  5. 5th place = ___

🧠 Mission 2 – Find the Position

Look at the line:

🐶 🐱 🐭 🐰 🦊

  1. Who is 1st? ___
  2. Who is 2nd? ___
  3. Who is 4th? ___
  4. Who is 5th? ___

🚀 Mission 3 – Real Life Ranking

In a school contest:

  1. Who is 1st? ___
  2. Who is 4th? ___
  3. Who is 3rd? ___

📘 Answers

Race Story

Luka

Mission 1

  1. Luka
  2. Sara
  3. Marko
  4. Ivana
  5. Anna

Mission 2

  1. Dog
  2. Cat
  3. Rabbit (4th = Fox is 5th actually depends ordering)
  4. Fox

Mission 3

  1. Aliya
  2. Milica
  3. Teo

💡 Final Message

Great job! Now you understand how to describe position, not just numbers. Ordinal numbers are used in races, competitions, floors in buildings, and many real-life situations.

Keep practicing — you are building strong math thinking step by step.

⬅ Back to Even and Odd Numbers

Math is everywhere — even in races and rankings!

Download Free Worksheet

Download a printable worksheet to practice ordinal numbers at home or in the classroom.

Download PDF Worksheet

Why Practice Ordinal Numbers?

This free lesson on ordinal numbers is designed for first grade and early elementary students. It combines clear explanations, examples, and exercises children can solve at their own pace.

Understanding position and order builds a strong foundation for harder math topics later. Parents and teachers can use this page in class or at home as supplementary practice.

After the lesson, children can download worksheets or play linked interactive games to reinforce the same skill through repetition and visual learning.

Lesson Benefits

  • Simple explanations for young learners
  • Practice exercises with answers included
  • Printable worksheet available
  • Links to free online math games
  • No registration required

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this lesson free?
Yes, all lessons on IloveMath are free.

What age is it for?
Mainly first grade and early elementary school.

How long should practice take?
10–15 minutes per session is usually enough.