Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is a third grader in a small private, too (we are happy and staying) and he is doing multiplication now, and some kids are moving on to division. They are having weekly quizes and moving to the next set of math facts when they pass. They spent the fall laying the groundwork for understanding multiplication and, to some extent, division. Looking forward to hearing what others are doing!
+1 (but public for my DC)
Anonymous wrote:OP here and thank you! Is just understanding the concept of fractions or adding them or something else? Could probably get DS caught up in the former but not doing any operations with them, especially if the denominators are different. If your children are on that I had better get a tutor fast!
Anonymous wrote:My DC in public has been doing fractions for a few weeks, in 3rd grade.
Anonymous wrote:Here is the curriculum guide for third grade.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedfiles/curriculum/elementary/parent-guide-curriculum2.0-grade3-en.pdf
Math in the third marking period:
Measurement and Data: Area—rectangles, rectilinear figures.
Operations and Algebraic Thinking: Multiplication and division models and fluency (within 100)—facts with 0-10; multiplication table patterns—properties of operations; multiplication and division word problems (1-step)—drawings, equations; equal groups of objects, arrays of objects; 1-step word problems (all
operations); distributive property of multiplication.
Number and Operations—Fractions*: Unit fractions (numerator of 1)—equal parts of a whole; fractions—building fractions from unit fractions.
Geometry: Partition shapes: equal areas.
*Grade 3 limited to denominators of 2, 3, 4, 6, 8
Anonymous wrote:My kid is a third grader in a small private, too (we are happy and staying) and he is doing multiplication now, and some kids are moving on to division. They are having weekly quizes and moving to the next set of math facts when they pass. They spent the fall laying the groundwork for understanding multiplication and, to some extent, division. Looking forward to hearing what others are doing!