8 mangoes shared by 2 children
sharing problem
Give one at a time to keep the sharing fair.
Example: Each child gets 4 mangoes.
Use equal sharing with fruits, pencils, or counters to understand division as fair groups.
Ask how many each child gets when the same number of objects are shared fairly. Keep the groups small and visible.
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sharing problem
Give one at a time to keep the sharing fair.
Example: Each child gets 4 mangoes.
sharing problem
Make three equal groups.
Example: Each child gets 4 pencils.
sharing problem
Count how many are in each equal group.
Example: Each child gets 2 shells.
These printables match this lesson's stage and theme, so a child can move from screen practice to calm hands-on work.
A Grade 3 math worksheet using simple fractions, weekdays, dates, and time patterns.
A Grade 3 reading worksheet for using clue words in questions to build fuller answers.
A Grade 3 grammar-in-use worksheet for spoken lines, punctuation, and word-choice tone.
Keep the reading rhythm going with another tiny lesson.
Start counting with very small groups children can touch, see, and move easily.
Count spoons, blocks, cups, or crayons and match the group to a number idea.
Compare two small groups and decide which one has more, less, or the same.