Where has the Time Gone? (Elapsed Time Worksheet)
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This is a 3rd Grade worksheet that reinforces how to tell time and then students have to solve 4 elapsed time word problems with visible clocks.
This is a 3rd Grade worksheet that reinforces how to tell time and then students have to solve 4 elapsed time word problems with visible clocks.
In this worksheet designed for 3rd-grade students, students will practice 6 multiplication and division fact family triangles. On the backside of the worksheet, students will practice 4-word single-step word problems.
3rd-grade students practice telling time using this worksheet. There are 9 clocks where students have to either draw the clock face or write down the time that a clock is showing. There is also 4 subtraction across zeros using 3 digit numbers as a review.
3rd-grade students practice telling time using this worksheet. There are 9 clocks where students have to either draw the clock face or write down the time that a clock is showing. There is also 4 subtraction across zeros using 3 digit numbers as a review.
3rd-grade students practice telling time using this worksheet. There are 9 clocks where students have to either draw the clock face or write down the time that a clock is showing. There is also 4 subtraction across zeros using 3 digit numbers as a review.
3rd-grade students practice telling time using this worksheet. There are 9 clocks where students have to either draw the clock face or write down the time that a clock is showing. There is also 4 subtraction across zeros using 3 digit numbers as a review.
This 3rd grade math assignment contains 6 quadrilaterals that have students come up with both the area and the perimeter of each shape.
It also contains 4 word problems that cause the students to think and diagram images in order to calculate either the area or perimeter.
Image anchor chart meant to demonstrate how to borrow when subtracting 2 to 3 digit numbers.
Meet Skip the Squirrel. Students solve 6, 3 digit subtraction questions to find out which color students will color in the picture with.
I use this Bingo activity as a review of multiplication strategies in my 3rd-grade classroom. There are 30 student cards and a teacher call sheet. This activity reviews groups of, repeated addition, using number lines to multiply and arrays. There are 16 squares per card and 25 different squares in the game. This way each card is unique and not all kids have all possible answers. When a student gets "Bingo" I actually have them go "Mmmmm, Multiplication" as if multiplication tasted good. It is fun.