ClassWeekly

3rd Grade Resources Worksheets

Ages 8-9 · 4 topics · 5 worksheets

Free printable 3rd Grade resources worksheets covering 4 topics. Aligned to Common Core standards and ready to print as PDFs for classroom use or homework.

Popular 3rd grade resources worksheets

What is ClassWeekly?

ClassWeekly offers free worksheets and printable learning resources for kids in preschool to grade 5. All worksheets are aligned to Common Core standards and designed by educators. Become a member to access the full library and download unlimited PDFs.

What K-5 classroom resources are on ClassWeekly?

Classroom resources on ClassWeekly include multiplication tables, alphabet posters, number charts, sight word lists, fraction strips, place value charts, and grammar reference sheets for Preschool through 5th grade. These are reference materials, not practice worksheets. Print them once and reuse them as classroom displays, desk references, or study aids.

Resources are the materials that live next to practice, not the practice itself. Posters, anchor charts, flash cards, sight word lists, multiplication tables, alphabet posters, fraction strips, math fact charts. Stuff you print once and use for the whole year.

This hub is built mostly for teachers and homeschool parents who need classroom-style reference materials. Stick a multiplication chart on the wall, hand a sight word list to a kid for review, build a math journal with reference inserts. The resources work alongside the regular worksheet library, not in place of it.

The resources are organized by grade and skill. Kindergarten and 1st grade have alphabet posters, sight word lists, number charts, and shape posters. 2nd through 5th grade add multiplication tables, fraction strips, place value charts, geometry references, and grammar quick-reference sheets.

Every resource is designed to print cleanly in black and white, the same as the practice worksheets. Some are also formatted for half-page or quarter-page printing if you want flash card or insert size.

These pages are not graded or filled in. They're reference materials. A kid uses them while doing other practice, or a teacher posts them for the class. If your kid is struggling with multiplication facts, a multiplication chart on the desk during fact practice is a fine scaffold for two or three weeks before pulling it back.

The library is smaller than the worksheet library because reference materials don't need a hundred variations. One good multiplication chart is enough.

Last reviewed: April 2026

Common questions about teaching resources