Grade 3 Math
Activities
JUNE
1.
Create a folder to hold your work.
Decorate the folder with labeled geometric shapes.
2.
Write five 2-digit numbers.
Choose the numbers so that when the digits of each are added, the sum is
9.
3.
Write a word problem whose answer is 12.
4.
Tally the number of cars that pass your house in 15 minutes. Repeat 3 times.
5.
Write the place value for each digit in the number 357i.
6.
Draw a Fahrenheit thermometer.
Label the freezing and boiling points.
7.
Calculate the difference in the highest and lowest temperatures of today.
8.
Compare today’s highest temperature with yesterday’s. What is the difference?
9.
Compare today’s highest temperature in degrees Celsius to degrees
Fahrenheit.
10.
Circle every number on the front page of the newspaper. How many are greater than 1,000?
11.
Draw a rectangle. Draw diagonals
to connect the opposite corners. How
many triangles in the figure?
12.
What happens when you add two even numbers? Two odd numbers?
13.
Multiply an odd number by 9, by 2, and by 3. What happens to the product each time?
14.
Name the factors of 24. Which
factors are odd and which are even?
15.
Write in words the number 9,889.
Name the value of each digit.
16.
Write in expanded form:
7,012 9,999 12,246
17.
Add the 10 digits in your phone number.
Can you divide the sum by 2 without a remainder?
18.
Write a word problem that this will solve: 6 x 8 =
19.
Round 3,847 to the nearest ten.
Round to the nearest hundred.
20.
Is the sum of 789, 542, and 733 >, <, or = to the sum of 441 and
833?
21.
Write the first five multiples of each even number through twelve.
22.
Write the first five multiples of each odd number through twelve.
23.
Who has the longest name in your family?
Graph the name of each family member.
24.
How many different 3-digit numbers can you make with the numbers 2, 3,
and 4?
25.
Circle the larger number in each pair.
(1267 or 1276) (3904 or
3940) (6513 or 6153)
26.
A farmer has chickens and cows.
What combinations could total 24 legs?
27.
Is 3 x 8 = 8 x 3? Draw an array
to explain.
28.
What are the values of 4(3+2), 3(4+2), and 2(4+3)?
29.
Write a schedule for tomorrow that includes hours and minutes of your
activities.
30.
How many parallelograms?
JULY
- Select
three books. Count how many words
you can read in one minute in each book.
Compare.
- On an
analog clock, the long hand is on 7 and the short hand is between 6 and
7. What time is it?
- It is
seven o’clock a.m. and your ride leaves in six hours. What time will it be then?
- What
is the date of the fifth Saturday of this month? How many months have 5 Saturdays this year?
- How do
the numbers on a calendar change when you move diagonally? Vertically?
- Carla
leaves on July 27th for a six day vacation. On what date will she return?
- What
will the twelfth number be in the pattern 2, 4, 7, 9, 12, 14 … What is the
rule for this pattern?
- What
date is 5 weeks from today?
- Read a
book. Identify all the ways math
is used in your story.
- Draw
the polygon with the fewest number of sides.
- Draw a
hexagon and divide it into equivalent pieces. How many pieces did you make?
- Describe
the angles in a square. How many
vertices are in a square?
- Compare
angles and sides of any rectangle and square.
- Describe
the angles in an octagon. How many
vertices are in an octagon?
- Describe
the angles in an equilateral triangle.
- Identify
cylinders in and around your home.
- Describe
the net of a cylinder. What shapes
do your see?
- Identify
cubes in and around your house.
- Describe
the net of a cube. What shapes do
you see?
- Identify
the number of faces, edges, & vertices that are found on a cube.
- Identify
rectangular prisms (other than a cube) in and around your house.
- Describe
the net of a rectangular prism.
What shapes do you see?
- Identify
the number of faces, edges, & vertices that are found on a rectangular
prism.
- Write
234,567 in expanded form.
- How
many different shapes can you make with an area of 24 square units?
- How
many rectangular shapes (arrays) can you make with an area of 24 square
units?
- What
multiplication families can be used to represent 24?
- What
is the perimeter for each array you made on July 26?
- Review
the times tables for 2, 3, and 4.
Have someone give you a quiz.
How did you do?
- Review
the times tables for 5 and 6. Have
someone give you a quiz. How did
you do?
- Write
23.45 in expanded form.
AUGUST
- If you
pack 3 shirts (yellow, red, and green) and 2 pairs of pants (black and
blue), how many outfits can you make?
- How
many ways can you line up an apple, an orange, a pear, a tomato?
- Measure
your height in feet. How many
inches tall are you?
- Use
your feet (heel-to-toe) to measure the length of your kitchen.
- Use
inches to measure the length and width of a table.
- Measure
the length, width, and height of a cereal box in centimeters.
- Estimate
and check how many cups of water it takes to fill a large pot.
- Color
a circle half green, one fourth blue and one-eighth yellow.
- How
many capital letters in the alphabet have line symmetry?
- How
many digits have line symmetry?
- Draw
the lines of symmetry for 3 different polygons (not quadrilaterals).
- Draw
the lines of symmetry for 3 different quadrilaterals.
- Measure
the length, width, and height of a cereal box in inches.
- How
many gallons of water does it take to fill your bathtub two inches?
- Name
as many things as you can that come in groups of three.
- Make a
hundred board. Circle all the
multiples of three and of nine.
- On the
hundred board, put an x on all the multiples of 5 and circle multiples of
10.
- Flip a
penny 50 times. Record the results
on a chart.
- Make a
chart to record the temperature for the next 7 days, starting today.
- How
many different numbers can you make using the digits in your address?
- How
many quarts of water does it take to fill the kitchen sink two inches?
- Figure
the amount of time that passed between when you woke up today and when you
ate lunch.
- Measure
the height of your front door in centimeters.
- List
20 things that have parallel lines.
- Compare
your weight with that of an adult you live with.
- Make a
graph that displays the temperature readings of the last seven days.
- What
fraction of the people that live in your house are adults?
- How
many liters of water does it take to fill two inches? Hint:
Use a 2-liter bottle.
- How
many different sundaes can you make with vanilla and chocolate ice cream,
sprinkles, nuts, and Oreos?
- List
all the combinations of coins you could use to make 52 cents.
- Measure
the height of 4 things in inches.
Permission
to use this calendar was granted by Toni Meyer, Elementary
Mathematics
Consultant for the North Carolina Department of
Public
Instruction. This calendar was adapted
from the
North
Carolina Team II project. Teaching
Excellence and Mathematics
(TEAM
II) is a teacher leadership project located at
Meredith
College in Raleigh. The project is
funded in
part by the National Science Foundation.