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Family and Community Guide for 3rd Grade
Working Together: To support families, communities, and teachers in realizing the goals of the Colorado Academic Standards (CAS), this guide provides an overview of the learning expectations for 3rd Grade. This guide offers some learning experiences students may engage in at school that may also be supported at home.
Why Standards? Created by Coloradans for Colorado students, the Colorado Academic Standards provide a grade-by-grade road map to help ensure students are successful in college, careers, and life. The standards aim to improve what students learn and how they learn in 12 content areas while emphasizing critical thinking, creativity, problem solving, collaboration, and communication as essential skills for life in the 21st century.
Where can I learn more?
- As always, the best place to learn about what your child is learning is from your child's teacher and school. The Colorado Academic Standards describe goals, but how those goals are met is a local decision.
- The Colorado Academic Standards were written for an audience of professional educators, but parents and community members looking to dig deeper may want to read them for themselves. Visit the Standards and Instructional Support homepage for several options for reviewing the Colorado Academic Standards.
- If you have further questions, please contact the content specialists in the Office of Standards and Instructional Support.
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Comprehensive Health (adopted 2018)
The comprehensive health standards in the elementary years focus on developing individual skills to enhance physical, emotional, and social wellness and using those individual skills in family, school, and community environments. In each grade, the standards ask students to investigate healthy eating and living habits, explore positive communication strategies, examine effective decision-making, and identify ways to ensure personal and community safety.
Expectations for 3rd Grade Students:
- Physical and Personal Wellness: Make and communicate appropriate food choices.
- Social and Emotional Wellness: Treat self and others with care and respect through interpersonal communication.
- Prevention and Risk Management: Examine the dangers of using tobacco products or being exposed to second-hand smoke; describe behaviors that enhance healthy interactions with others; identify ways to prevent injuries at home, in school, and in the community.
Throughout 3rd Grade You May Find Students:
- Identifying healthy food choices; making decisions about proper food portions; recognizing factors for healthy and unhealthy eating.
- Describing self-respect and self-esteem.
- Communicating ways to express personal space and boundaries.
- Describing examples of positive behavior and care toward others.
- Learning positive interpersonal communication skills; expressing verbal and non-verbal communication.
- Following a safety plan; utilizing safe pedestrian and bicycle behavior; identifying and developing fire safety practices to reduce and avoid risky or potentially unsafe situations.
- Explaining the effects of second-hand smoke on the body; discussing the benefits of not using tobacco and marijuana.
- Exploring the negative impact of providing personal information on social media.
Computer Science (adopted 2018)
Computer science may be taught at all levels preschool through high school, but the State of Colorado only has standards for computer science in high school.
Read the high school computer science family and community guide.
In 3rd Grade, students:
- Movement, Technique, and Performance: Perform basic dance associated to a style.
- Create, Compose and Choreograph: Create simple dances.
- Historical and Cultural Context: Identify dance from different time periods or cultures.
- Reflect, Connect, and Respond: Use specific vocabulary to describe dance movements. Discover the relationship between dance and other art forms and academic content areas.
In 3rd Grade, students:
- Create: Use vocal and physical choices to create characters. Make creative choices that portray the setting/mood/locale of a scene through costumes, props, and stage decorations.
- Perform: Research character qualities through movement and vocal choices.
- Critically Respond: Discuss and critique character choices and various design and technical choices that improve a dramatic production.
Mathematics (adopted 2018)
The mathematics standards in the elementary years focus on number and operations. Ideas from measurement and geometry help students learn about numbers and quantities. In each grade, students make sense of problems, explain their thinking, and describe their world with mathematics.
Expectations for 3rd Grade Students:
- Number and Quantity: Understand fractions as numbers that can be located on a number line.
- Algebra and Functions: Fluently (consistently) multiply and divide within 100 and add and subtract within 1000; understand the relationship between multiplication and division.
- Data, Statistics, and Probability: Create pictographs and bar graphs and connect them to the concepts of multiplication and division.
- Geometry: Find the area of a rectangle and connect area to the meaning of multiplication and division; create categories of shapes based on attributes.
Throughout 3rd Grade You May Find Students:
- Solving word problems involving addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.
- Showing multiplication and division using pictures of equals groups and equations.
- Playing games to build fluency (consistency) with basic facts by discovering patterns related to multiplication and division.
- Connecting their work with fractions to their work with whole numbers (such as verbally counting with fractions).
- Drawing shapes to show fractions.
- Locating fractions on a number line and on a ruler.
- Covering shapes with squares to understand the difference between area and perimeter.
In 3rd Grade, students:
- Expression of Music: Perform singing and playing techniques such as keeping a steady beat with changing rhythmic patterns and following an accompaniment.
- Creation of Music: Create music to follow a plan.
- Theory of Music: Read and write various music notation symbols.
- Response to Music: Discuss music from various cultures.
Physical Education (adopted 2018)
The physical education standards in the elementary years focus on enhancing movement concepts and skills, understanding basic health-related components and skill-related components of fitness and how it relates to personal fitness, demonstrating respect, and the ability to follow directions. In each grade, students demonstrate various movement concepts; assess personal behaviors; connect fitness development to body systems; demonstrate respect for self, others, and various physical activity environments; and utilize safety procedures during physical activities.
Expectations for 3rd Grade Students:
- Movement Competence and Understanding: Demonstrate a variety of motor patterns in simple combinations while participating in activities, games, and sports; perform cross-lateral and rhythmic exercises that make a brain-body connection; demonstrate understanding of how the use of self-assessment aids in skill development.
- Physical and Personal Wellness: Identify the benefits of sustained physical activity that causes increased heart rate and heavy breathing; understand that the body is composed of water, muscle, bones, organs, fat and other tissues.
- Social and Emotional Wellness: Demonstrate positive social behaviors during physical activity.
- Prevention and Risk Management: Identify ways to prevent injuries during physical activity.
Throughout 3rd Grade You May Find Students:
- Demonstrating changes of pathways, levels, forces, and direction with manipulatives (e.g., hoops, streamers, and balls).
- Demonstrating throwing, catching, striking, or trapping in an activity.
- Performing a variety of jump-rope skills using both short and long ropes successfully and jumping rope to various tempos.
- Using instructor or self feedback to make adjustments that will improve performance.
- Explaining why the body perspires, the heart beats faster and breathing increases when participating in moderate to vigorous physical activity.
- Locating heart rate on at least two different pulse points on the body.
- Comparing heart rate before, during, and after exercise and explaining that increasing the heart rate during physical activity strengthens the heart muscles.
- Encouraging others regularly and refraining from put-down statements.
- Recognizing how injuries can occur during physical activity.
Reading, Writing, and Communicating for K-5 (adopted 2018)
The reading, writing, and communicating standards move from developing skills in reading, writing, and communicating to applying these literacy skills to more complex texts through the elementary years. Standards at each grade emphasize skills related to speaking and collaborating with others as students work with literature and informational readings and participate in individual and group research projects.
Expectations for 3rd Grade Students:
- Oral Expression and Listening: Use informal and formal oral communication to work successfully and cooperatively with others.
- Reading for All Purposes: Use different strategies to make meaning of literary books (stories, poems), informational texts (science books, “how-to” books), and persuasive pieces (movie reviews, speeches); understand that prefixes (pre-, non-, un-) and suffixes (-est, -less, -ness) have meaning; develop vocabulary to understand different readings.
- Writing and Composition: Use a writing process (plan, draft, revise, edit, and share) to write a variety of stories, information, and opinion pieces; apply correct grammar, capitalization, punctuation, and spelling to effectively communicate to an audience of readers.
- Research Inquiry and Design: Research a topic and share the findings of that research individually and with others; make connections between two texts to see different points of view on a topic.
Throughout 3rd Grade You May Find Students:
- Reading with fluency (appropriate speed, accuracy, and expression) to understand a variety of texts – narrative stories, information books (“how-to” and nonfiction books about the world around them), and opinion pieces (book and movie reviews, newspaper commentary); using different strategies (asking questions, summarizing, making connections) to better understand challenging readings.
- Writing about books, stories, poems to “think through” ideas; discussing readings or topics in group settings; recalling details and relevant facts from readings for discussions; making personal connections to books, stories, poems.
- Evaluating an author’s choice of words and point of view in a piece of writing; exploring the connections between words, illustrations, charts, photos and captions; comparing themes, characters, and setting; comparing key ideas and details between informational writings (science books, “how-to” books).
- Writing real and imagined stories, informational writings (brochures, “how-to” writings, “I’m an Expert On...”), and opinion pieces (movie and book reviews); writing with focus, organization, and details; finding questions to research, using sources to answer questions; presenting (in writing or verbally) knowledge gained from research.
Science (adopted 2018)
Three-dimensional science standards in the elementary grades lay the foundation for students to work and think like scientists and engineers. We also see strong connections to skills students will use to be successful with reading, literacy and mathematics. In elementary grades we will explore disciplinary core ideas in physical, life, and earth and space sciences via phenomena in the world around us. Learners in elementary grades develop and ask testable questions, collect and analyze different types of evidence, and write and communicate our understanding. Mastery of these standards will result in young learners who have a deep understanding of how scientific knowledge can provide solutions to practical problems we see in our world.
Expectations for 3rd Grade Students:
- Physical Science: Recognize that objects in contact can exert a force on each other. Understand that electric and magnetic force between objects do not require contact, and that patterns of motion can be used to predict future motion.
- Life Science: Recognize that organisms have unique and diverse life cycles, and vary in how they look and function because they have different inherited information. Explain how being part of a group helps animals obtain food, defend themselves, and cope with changes. Understand that some living organisms resemble organisms that once lived on Earth.
- Earth and Space Science: Explain how climate describes patterns of typical weather conditions over different scales and variations. Understand that a variety of weather hazards result from natural processes, and that although humans cannot eliminate weather-related hazards, we can reduce their impact.
Throughout 3rd Grade You May Find Students:
- Asking questions to determine the cause and effect relationship of electric or magnetic forces between objects.
- Planning and conducting investigations about the effects of balanced and unbalanced force on an object.
- Developing models to describe how though organisms have unique and diverse life cycles, all organisms experience birth, growth, reproduction, and death.
- Obtaining and combining information to describe climates in different regions of the world.
- Making claims about the merit of a design solution that reduces the impacts of a weather-related hazard.
Social Studies (adopted 2022)
The social studies standards in the elementary years begin with individuals and families and move from there to explorations of neighborhoods, communities, the state of Colorado, and the United States. In each grade, students investigate historical events, examine geographic features and resources, consider economic decision-making processes, and define civic roles and responsibilities.
In 3rd Grade, students:
- Create a chronological sequence of events for the community or region. (History)
- Discuss important events and the diverse cultures and people that have shaped the history of their region and community. (History)
- Describe the history, interaction, and contribution of various peoples and cultures, including African American, Latino, Asian American, Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, Indigenous Peoples, LGBTQ, and religious minorities that have lived in a community. (History)
- Read and interpret maps to locate geographic features in the community and state. (Geography)
- Identify the factors that make a region unique, such as cultural diversity, industry, agriculture, and landforms. (Geography)
- Define producer, consumer, goods, and services, and describe how goods are exchanged. (Economics)
- Discuss local forms of government such as city councils and explain what local governments do, who participates, and how they work. (Civics)
- Develop short-term money goals (saving and spending) and write steps necessary to reach that goal. (Personal Financial Literacy)
In 3rd Grade, students:
- Observe and Learn to Comprehend: Investigate what a piece of art is trying to express and recognize how artists intentionally create meaning.
- Envision and Critique to Reflect: Show how experimenting and researching help an artist create what they intended.
- Invent and Discover to Create: Plan and create a work of art and begin to know when it is finished.
- Relate and Connect to Transfer: Notice how works of art share ideas and meaning with home cultures and with cultures outside of one’s home culture.
World Languages (adopted 2018)
Instead of being organized by grade level, the world languages standards are organized into ranges that describe the progression of learning a student should experience as they grow from novice language learners to an advanced user.
Read the world languages family and community guide for elementary school here.
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