The punctuation mark with which you end a sentence can change the tone of your statement completely. Teach your third grader how to identify these different tones and their appropriate uses with these exercises made just for them.
Give your students the foot up they need in geometry with these exercises that have your third graders work forwards and backwards through area problems.
Teach your young learners about the importance of apostrophes in writing with these exercises that explain how the punctuation mark can be used to show possessives, and how it differs from contractions.
For students who find word problems challenging, this exercise will make it easier to understand subtraction and elapsed time presented in word format.
As students grow more comfortable with the order of operations, they’ll need this exercise to introduce them to working with one digit distributive properties.
Kids will get lots of practice with capitalizing the titles of common books and poems in this exercise. Helpful hints guide kids on the rules of capitalization.