Create your own crazy story with this fill-in-the-blank story! Your budding writer will practice parts of speech as he fills in missing parts of the story.
In this worksheet, learners will complete a camping-themed word search puzzle, then answer a prompt inviting them to describe their favorite camping activity or memory.
Got a kid crazy for Mad Libs? This summertime edition of the classic kid's game works on writing "hardware" that kids encounter in later elementary years.
The curriculum broadens and the workload intensifies when students reach third grade. One way to lessen the stress and accelerate the learning is with our third grade worksheets. Whether your student needs some extra help with fractions or story sequencing, or is simply interested in learning more about how the earth spins, he’ll find dozens of third grade worksheets designed to help bolster skills in math, reading, writing, science, history, and more!
Kids Will Yearn to Learn with Third Grade Worksheets
If there was a window to the brain of a third grader, you’d likely see it constantly pulsating as it absorbs the vast number of new educational concepts and components that comprise the third grade curriculum. In fact, if fourth grade completes the transition from the shallow to the deep end of the educational swimming pool, third grade would represent the diving platform.
Indeed, this is the year when instructors push a lot harder and demand a lot more. Which means it’s also the year when students can get a lot more confused and frustrated. One way to keep that pulsating brain from short-circuiting is to print out some of our third grade worksheets, which were created by teachers to help students better grasp all of the new knowledge tools being added to their educational toolbox.
Our vast collection of worksheets address every subject, from math, science and social studies to language arts and fine arts. Which means that when your third grader leaves school a bit perplexed by a new concept — be it equivalent fractions, the moon’s phases, or comparing and contrasting reading texts — she can come home, print out a third grade worksheet, and practice her way to proficiency.