A sentence diagram is a way to graphically represent the structure of a sentence, showing how words in a sentence function and relate to each other. The printable practice worksheets below provide supplemental help in learning the basic concepts of sentence diagramming. Feel free to print them off and duplicate for home or classroom use.
As strengthening the smallest block ultimately leads to strengthening the entire structure, so does diagramming sentence skills lead to a strong understanding of linguistics and precision in written language. Our collection of printable sentence diagramming worksheets encompasses a variety of sentence structures with verbs, adverbs, prepositional phrases and more to provide the skills of recognizing and representing the literary order to discover logical relations. These pdf worksheets are ideal for students of grade 2 through grade 6. Explore some of them for free!
Practicing visual diagrams focusing specifically on linking and helping verbs, will enable grade 3 and grade 4 students to get a deeper understanding of how verbs function and relate to other parts of a sentence.
Help 3rd grade and 4th grade students identify parts of speech easily and understand how things within language fall together, with our printable sentence diagramming worksheet focusing on simple adverbs.
Gain awareness of connections between subjects and other parts of sentences at its most fundamental level, as a direct approach of articulating with precision and unambiguously, with this pdf worksheet.
Encourage 5th grade and 6th grade children to practice diagramming these sentences with both compound subjects and predicates to gain a better insight into linguistics and grammar with pictorial representation.
This pdf worksheet for grade 4 and grade 5 clearly represents the manner by which reflexive pronouns are placed and connected to the remaining words, and the nature of such grammatical sentence structure in written language.
Also known as a predicate nominative, it renames the subject or complements the verb. Representing structures containing predicate nouns, pictorially, will facilitate its interpretation significantly.
Objects constitute an integral part of most sentences in English. Hence, this printable sentence diagramming worksheet for grade 5 and grade 6 will elicit how literary order can be varied indefinitely using a single logical relation.
Diagramming Interrogative sentences will make the students focus on examining the sentence and deal with structural difficulties, thereby helping them come up with solutions aiming at grammatical precision.
Our grade 2 data worksheets emphasize using graphs to represent data. Students practice creating and / or reading pictographs, line plots, bar graphs, pie charts, line graphs and simple Venn diagrams.
A strip diagram is a visual model commonly used in elementary grades to aid in solving a problem with known and unknown quantities. A strip diagram can also be known as a bar model, a tape diagram, a fraction strip, a length model, or a part-part-whole model.
A strip diagram allows students to visualize the problem or equation they are trying to solve in a simple and efficient way. These visual models are quick and easy to draw and allow students to create a representation of the relationship between the quantities involved in the problem.
They are especially helpful when students are solving word problems, as it can also help them determine which operation they need to use. This is a skill many students struggle with and this is a quick strategy that can be used with all four operations.
To use a strip diagram, you will start by drawing two rectangles of the same size. Depending on the equation and the operation needed, the bottom rectangle will be split into two or more parts. Either the top rectangle, or one or more parts of the bottom rectangle, will be blank to represent the unknown quantity that needs to be found. No matter the operation, the top rectangle will represent the total of the parts of the bottom rectangle.
Looking at the examples below, you can see that the way we use strip diagrams for addition and subtraction, as well as for multiplication and division, are the same but with different unknown quantities. For addition and subtraction, the strip diagram will be used as a part-part-whole model. The total will be the top rectangle, whether this quantity is known or unknown, and the parts will make up the rectangles at the bottom. With multiplication and division, the total is also represented by the top rectangle, and the bottom rectangle represents the groups.
The unknown quantity in this problem is the number of blue marbles. The red marbles and blue marbles together still make up the total number of marbles. So the setup of the rectangles in our strip diagram did not change, but our unknown quantity did. Students should be able to deduce that this word problem will need to be solved using subtraction.
Instead of seeing the 4 and 8 represented numerically, the groups, or jars in this example, are represented in the bottom section of our strip diagram. As you can see, the bottom portion consists of 4 equal-sized rectangles. Inside each of these smaller rectangles is the number 8; this represents the 8 marbles inside each of the 4 jars. The top rectangle, again, shows our total. Since this is multiplication, this would be our product.
In the division example, we are given the total number of marbles, which was the product of our multiplication example. We know that this number will be represented by our top rectangle. The bottom portion, again, will represent our equal groups. Since we know the number of groups, or jars, which is 4, the bottom portion is again split into 4 equal-sized groups. The unknown quantity here is the number of marbles that are in each of the jars, or each of the groups. Students should be able to deduce that division will need to be used to solve this problem.
Although your typical strip diagram or bar model will be drawn with two rectangles on top of each other, as the examples above show, there are other ways to draw strip diagrams. Be aware that you may see many other interpretations of this model, but they are all used the same way. Here are a few examples:
Then, instead of using their notebook pages or worksheets each day, they can pull out their template and a dry erase marker and fill in the template according to the problem they are presented that day. The templates for all grade levels, as well as all four operations, can simply be two blank rectangles stacked on top of one another.
In this problem, students are asked to complete the diagram in order to help them solve it. As you can see, students are given the number in the top rectangle, which is the total number of beads Anna has. The other known quantity in this word problem is 6, which is the number of necklaces the beads will be divided by. Based on this information, students should determine that the bottom rectangle needs to be split into 6 equal groups. Then, they can solve for the unknown quantity, which is the number in each of those 6 groups (which they will write in each of the 6 sections they create in the bottom rectangle.)
Mason has a membership at the local gym. His membership costs $34 every two months. How much does his membership cost in one year? Choose the diagram that correctly represents this problem. Note that t represents the total cost of the membership.
In this problem, students need to be able to read and interpret a strip diagram correctly in order to answer the question. The question gives students a known quantity of $34, but requires them to infer the second known quantity, which is 6. Since Mason pays $34 every 2 months, he pays the fee 6 times during the year, since there are 12 months in a year. Students may misinterpret this known quantity as 2, since 2 is the other number mentioned in the word problem. Once students understand that he pays $34 6 times, they should look for a diagram which shows 6 groups of $34 that equal the total. The only answer that fits this description is answer choice b.
A teacher bought 5 boxes of pencils for her classroom. Each box contained 24 pencils. Then, she divided them evenly among 8 groups of students. Use the diagram to find how many pencils were given to each group of students.
Then, once they have the total, they can divide that number by the total number of groups, which is 8. The diagram will help them visualize this, as well, since the bottom portion of the strip diagram is partitioned into 8 groups. Then, students can see that the unknown quantity is the number in each group. Students should divide the total number by 8 to get the answer, represented by the question mark in the diagram.
3. Millie has a photo album with 18 pages. Each page can hold 9 pictures. So far she has 126 photos in her photo album. Use the diagram to find the number of photos, p, she can still put into her album.
5. Amir, Jonah, and Bridget went trick-or-treating together. At the end of the night, Amir had 42 pieces of candy and Jonah had 53 pieces of candy. The three friends decided to combine their candy. Altogether, they had 146 pieces of candy. Use the diagram to determine, b, how much candy Bridget had before the friends combined their candy.
This third grade vocabulary list was built from an analysis of difficult words that appear in basal readers and other books commonly taught in the 3rd grade. Those words were then analyzed to see how often they appeared on English Language Arts state tests given in the third, fourth and fifth grades. This vocabulary word list is free and printable, but is also available through our systematic vocabulary development program, The Word Up Project, which has been proven to raise scores. You can also view the word lists of the other levels of The Word Up Project.
Get printable worksheets to teach 3rd grade vocabulary now!
Grade 3 science worksheets PDF 3rd grade science worksheets PDF. This page features a multitude of science activities for third graders. Featuring are printable activities on: states of matter, ecosystems, plants, fossils, weather, mixtures, Earth processes, classification of organisms, change of state of matter, rocks and minerals & more. 3rd class science worksheets Worksheets and tests for 3 grade science helping your child learn science biology for children anatomy for children fun experiment for kids etc.
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