Welcome to Grade 3 Mathematics!
Grade 3 is THE turning point!
This is the year math shifts from concrete counting and basic operations to more abstract thinking and complex problem-solving.
Your child is developing true mathematical reasoning: seeing patterns, making connections, and understanding the elegant structure behind our number system.
Setting Up Your Math-Rich Home
Third graders are developing mathematical independence and need tools that support deeper thinking:
Create Visual Anchors
- Multiplication chart displayed prominently—they're building fact fluency all year 
- Number line to 10,000 for place value visualization and rounding practice 
Keep Tools Accessible
- Graph paper, rulers, and measuring tools in a dedicated math toolkit 
- Clock with moveable hands for elapsed time problem-solving 
- Whiteboard or large paper for working through multi-step problems 
The Essentials
Math picture books (start with 3-5, build your collection)
- Base-ten blocks (critical for place value—buy or make with graph paper) 
- Multiplication chart for reference (not for memorizing, for noticing patterns!) 
- Fraction bars or circles (can print and cut from paper) 
- Rulers (both inches and centimeters) 
- Graph paper (lots of it for area, arrays, patterns) 
- Playing cards and dice for games 
- A clock with moveable hands for time practice 
- Paper, markers, scissors, glue 
- Hundreds chart and number lines (printable) 
Make Math Visible
- Fraction strips or circles easily accessible—these make abstract concepts concrete 
- Reference poster showing area vs. perimeter formulas they're learning 
Nice to Haves
- Pattern blocks 
- Linking cubes 
- Geoboard 
- Teaching clock 
- Play money 
- Tangrams 
- Calculator (for checking work, not doing work) 
Our approach: Grade 3 concepts benefit from quality manipulatives, but we always offer alternatives using household items.
Ready to dive in?
Your Quick-Start Path
- Pick a concept that matches where your child is right now (or start with Concept 1!) 
- Grab a book from the library or our store that introduces the concept 
- Try an activity together using things you have at home 
- Apply it through a project when they're ready to go deeper 
Notice math everywhere and point it out as you go about your day
Concept List for Grade 3:
Most concepts need 3-4 weeks with your child.
Third graders can handle deeper dives, longer projects, and more independence. They're ready to struggle productively, persist through challenges, and experience real breakthrough moments.
Below you'll find every concept your third grader will explore.
Click to dive into activities, books that bring the concept to life, and projects that let them apply what they're learning.
NUMBER SENSE & COUNTING
- 
      
        
          
        
      
      What your child is learning: Third graders expand their understanding of place value into the thousands—and it's mind-blowing when it clicks! They see that our number system is brilliantly organized: groups of 10 ones make a ten, groups of 10 tens make a hundred, groups of 10 hundreds make a thousand. This understanding is absolutely critical for every math concept ahead: multi-digit operations, decimals, fractions, and even algebra. Skills they're building: - Understanding place value to 10,000 (thousands, hundreds, tens, ones) 
- Reading and writing four-digit numbers in standard form (3,456) and expanded form (3,000 + 400 + 50 + 6) 
- Comparing four-digit numbers using >, <, = 
- Rounding to the nearest 10 and 100 
- Understanding that each place is 10 times the place to its right 
- Composing and decomposing numbers flexibly (3,456 = 34 hundreds and 56 ones) 
- Skip counting by 100s and 1,000s 
- Adding and subtracting 10, 100, or 1,000 mentally 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
OPERATIONS
- 
      
        
          
        
      
      What your child is learning: This is THE year for multiplication! But we're not just memorizing times tables—we're building deep understanding of what multiplication means, multiple strategies for solving problems, and seeing the beautiful patterns in multiplication. When kids understand WHY 6×7=42 (through arrays, skip counting, and patterns), they remember it. When they just memorize it, they forget it by next week. Skills they're building: - Fluency with multiplication facts within 10×10 
- Understanding multiplication as equal groups, arrays, and repeated addition 
- Using strategies: skip counting, doubling, distributive property (breaking apart) 
- Recognizing patterns in multiplication (5s always end in 0 or 5, etc.) 
- Understanding the commutative property (3×4 = 4×3) 
- Solving multiplication word problems 
- Connecting multiplication to area (rows × columns) 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
- 
      
        
      
      What your child is learning: Division is multiplication's flip side, and third graders need to see that relationship clearly! They also encounter remainders for the first time—what happens when things don't divide evenly? This concept builds flexibility in thinking and prepares them for fractions (remainders are baby fractions!). Skills they're building: - Fluency with division facts (inverse of multiplication facts) 
- Understanding division as sharing equally and as repeated subtraction 
- Solving division problems with remainders 
- Interpreting remainders in context (sometimes you round up, sometimes down) 
- Understanding the relationship between multiplication and division (fact families) 
- Using multiplication to check division 
- Solving division word problems with and without remainders 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
- 
      
        
      
      What your child is learning: With solid place value understanding, third graders become fluent with adding and subtracting three- and four-digit numbers. They understand regrouping (trading and borrowing) as logical moves, not mysterious tricks. They develop flexibility—sometimes mental math works, sometimes they need to write it out, sometimes estimation is enough. Skills they're building: - Adding and subtracting within 10,000 
- Understanding regrouping/carrying across multiple places 
- Using multiple strategies (standard algorithm, place value, mental math) 
- Estimating sums and differences using rounding 
- Checking answers using inverse operations 
- Solving multi-step word problems 
- Understanding when exact answers matter vs. when estimates are sufficient 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
Not Sure Where to Start?
If your child just finished Grade 2: Start with Concept 1 (Place Value to 10,000) or Concept 2 (Multiplication). Read Place Value by David A. Adler or Each Orange Had 8 Slices and explore with hands-on materials.
If multiplication is shaky: Focus on Concept 2 (Multiplication Facts & Strategies). Use arrays, skip counting, and visual models extensively. Read One Hundred Hungry Ants together.
If fractions feel scary: Jump to Concept 7 (Understanding Fractions). Read Give Me Half! and work with fraction bars and number lines. Build concrete understanding before moving forward.
If your child loves challenges: Try any of the big STEM projects or start with Concept 11 (Patterns & Algebraic Thinking) for brain-stretching fun.
Still not sure? Email us at hello@teach-early.com! We'll help you find the perfect starting point for your child.
GEOMETRY
- 
      
        
          
        
      
      What your child is learning: Perimeter is the distance around a shape—and third graders discover this concept connects to addition, measurement, and real-world scenarios (fencing a yard, framing a picture). They learn that different shapes can have the same perimeter, and understanding this builds spatial reasoning. Skills they're building: - Understanding perimeter as the distance around a shape 
- Calculating perimeter by adding all side lengths 
- Finding missing side lengths when perimeter is known 
- Understanding that shapes with the same perimeter can look very different 
- Solving perimeter word problems 
- Measuring sides accurately to calculate perimeter 
- Beginning to understand formulas (P = 2l + 2w for rectangles) 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
- 
      
        
      
      What your child is learning: Area is about covering space—how many square units fit inside a shape? This connects to multiplication (rows × columns) and builds foundation for fractions, decimals, and even algebra. Third graders discover that shapes can have the same area but different perimeters (mind-blowing!) and this builds deep spatial reasoning. Skills they're building: - Understanding area as the space inside a shape measured in square units 
- Counting square units to find area 
- Using multiplication to find area of rectangles (length × width) 
- Understanding that area is measured in square units (square inches, square feet, etc.) 
- Recognizing that shapes with same area can have different perimeters and vice versa 
- Solving area word problems 
- Decomposing irregular shapes into rectangles to find total area 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
MEASUREMENT & DATA
- 
      
        
          
        
      
      What your child is learning: Third graders master telling time to the nearest minute and tackle elapsed time—how much time passed? This requires understanding the relationship between hours and minutes, adding and subtracting across the hour, and problem-solving with time. It's more complex than it seems and incredibly useful for independence! Skills they're building: - Telling time to the nearest minute 
- Understanding AM and PM 
- Calculating elapsed time (start time + duration = end time) 
- Solving elapsed time problems across the hour (2:45 to 3:15 is 30 minutes) 
- Understanding the relationship between seconds, minutes, and hours 
- Reading schedules and timelines 
- Solving word problems involving time 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
- 
      
        
      
      What your child is learning: Third graders become confident measurers and estimators! They work with standard units (inches, feet, centimeters, meters) and develop number sense about measurement—understanding that 100 inches is really long, but 100 centimeters is about a meter. Estimation becomes an important skill for checking if answers make sense. Skills they're building: - Measuring length using rulers (inches and centimeters) accurately 
- Choosing appropriate units for different measurements 
- Estimating measurements before measuring 
- Understanding relationships between units (12 inches = 1 foot, 100 cm = 1 meter) 
- Measuring and estimating liquid volume and mass 
- Solving measurement word problems 
- Understanding precision (measuring to nearest inch vs. nearest 1/4 inch) 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
- 
      
        
      
      What your child is learning: Third graders become sophisticated data collectors and interpreters! They create and analyze picture graphs, bar graphs, and line plots. They understand that how you display data affects what people see and understand. This builds analytical thinking and connects to science inquiry. Skills they're building: - Creating scaled picture graphs (each symbol = 2, 5, or 10) 
- Creating and interpreting bar graphs with scaled axes 
- Creating and interpreting line plots 
- Asking statistical questions that can be answered with data 
- Collecting and organizing data systematically 
- Drawing conclusions from data displays 
- Understanding that data displays can be misleading depending on scale and presentation 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
FRACTIONS
- 
      
        
          
        
      
      What your child is learning: This is huge! Fractions aren't just pieces of pizza—they're numbers that live on the number line between whole numbers. Third graders develop foundational fraction understanding: what fractions mean, how to represent them, and how to compare them. This groundwork is absolutely critical for all future fraction work (operations in Grades 4-5, decimals, percents, algebra). Skills they're building: - Understanding fractions as equal parts of a whole 
- Recognizing and naming unit fractions (1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/8) 
- Understanding numerator and denominator 
- Representing fractions on number lines 
- Understanding fractions as numbers (3/4 is a specific point between 0 and 1) 
- Comparing fractions with same denominators (3/8 > 2/8) 
- Comparing fractions with same numerators (1/3 > 1/4 because thirds are bigger pieces) 
- Understanding equivalent fractions visually (2/4 = 1/2) 
- Recognizing whole numbers as fractions (3 = 3/1) 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
ALGEBRAIC THINKING
- 
      
        
          
        
      
      What your child is learning: Third graders are ready for early algebraic thinking! They explore number patterns, understand properties of operations (commutative, associative, distributive), and work with equations that have unknowns. This builds the foundation for formal algebra in middle school and develops logical reasoning now. Skills they're building: - Identifying, describing, and extending patterns 
- Understanding properties of operations (3×4 = 4×3, adding in any order gives same sum) 
- Using the distributive property (6×7 = 6×5 + 6×2) 
- Finding unknown values in equations (24 ÷ ___ = 8) 
- Understanding equality (both sides of = have the same value) 
- Creating and solving simple equations 
- Using patterns to make predictions 
 Picture books | Tools | Activities | Big Projects that make it click 
A Note from the Teach Early Team:
Grade 3 is where everything comes together—or where cracks start to show.
This is the year kids either think "I can do math!" or "I'm not good at math." The difference? Not innate ability. It's whether they've built genuine understanding or been pushed to memorize procedures they don't comprehend.
We see it all the time: Third graders who can recite multiplication facts but can't solve a word problem involving equal groups. Kids who can follow an algorithm but can't explain why it works. Students who get correct answers but have no idea if those answers make sense.
That's not real learning. That's performance without understanding.
Our curriculum is designed to prevent this. Every concept is built from concrete understanding through visual representation to abstract thinking. We never ask kids to memorize what they don't understand. We never value speed over comprehension.
Because here's what we know: A third grader with deep understanding of multiplication, division, fractions, and place value is SET for all future math. Those concepts are the foundation for everything—decimals, percents, ratios, algebra, geometry, statistics.
Get Grade 3 right, not just "done" but really understood, and the rest unfolds naturally.
Your child is building their mathematical identity this year. They're deciding whether math makes sense or feels like magic. Whether they can figure things out or need to be told what to do. Whether they're "math people" or not.
Let's make sure they see themselves as the mathematical thinkers they absolutely are.
With deep belief in your child's capability,
The Teach Early Team
Beyond Grade 3
Where This Journey Leads
Moving to Grade 4: Grade 3 is THE foundational year. Everything your child learns now—multiplication, division, fractions, area, place value—becomes the basis for Grade 4's work with multi-digit operations, fraction operations, decimals, and more complex geometry. Solid understanding now prevents struggles later.
The Critical Nature of Grade 3: This is when mathematical thinking either takes root or kids start to think "I'm not a math person." Our approach prioritizes understanding over speed, depth over coverage, confidence over competition. The goal is mathematical thinkers, not human calculators.
[Preview Grade 4 Math Curriculum →]
Connect the Learning
Grade 3 Science: Multiplication and division appear in science constantly (plant growth rates, animal populations, measurement). Data collection is core to science inquiry. Fractions show up in experiments and observations.
[Explore Grade 3 Science Curriculum → Coming Soon]
Grade 3 ELA: Word problems require reading comprehension. Explaining mathematical thinking builds communication skills. Math picture books develop vocabulary and inferencing. Writing about math deepens understanding.
[Explore Grade 3 ELA Curriculum → Coming Soon]
