Mathematics Curriculum Guide
Preface
Grade 3
Problem-Solving
Students will: 1. Use multiple approaches to investigate and understand mathematical content. 2. Formulate problems from everyday and mathematical situations. 3. Develop and apply strategies to solve a wide variety of problems, including multi-step and non-routine problems. 4. Verify and interpret results with respect to the original problem. 5. Generalize solutions and strategies to new problem situations. 6. Acquire confidence in using mathematics meaningfully. 7. Recognize and formulate problems from within and outside mathematics. 8. Apply the process of mathematical modeling to real-world problem situations. Connections
Students will: 1. Link conceptual and procedural knowledge. 2. Relate various representations of concepts or procedures to one another. 3. Recognize and value the relationships among the different topics in mathematics. 4. Use mathematics in other curriculum areas and in daily living. 5. Explore problems and describe results by using graphical, numerical, physical, algebraic, and verbal mathematical models or representations. 6. Apply mathematical thinking and modeling to solve problems that arise in other disciplines. 7. Recognize equivalent representations of the same concept. 8. Relate procedures in one representation to procedures in an equivalent representation. |
Content
Number Sense, Estimation, & Computation: 1. Demonstrate an understanding and application of numbers, numerals, and sets of 0-500 including evenness, single digit divisors, decimals. 2. Use letters in statements for one unknown. 3. Manipulate whole numbers, fractions, and decimals on a number line. 4. Identify, order fractional parts of a region, fractions, equal, unequal in concrete models. 5. Formulate computation strategies: add and subtract groups of 10, rounding, etc. 6. Demonstrate calculator options and keys. 7. Estimate dimensions of geometric shapes. 1. Understand concept of perimeter and area. 2. Demonstrate relationships and properties of geometric figures and develop angles/symmetry by folding, geoboards, mirrors, etc. 3. Compare sets of currency. 4. Correctly give change. 5. Compare Fahrenheit and Celsius. 6. Determine elapsed time (digital and analogue). 7. Describe length, weight, capacity with metric and standard units of measure. Patterns, Relations, & Functions: 1 Demonstrate an understanding and application of patterns and strategies to solve problems. 2. Create tables of values in relation to pairs. 3. Use Venn diagrams. 4. Write an argument for a given solution. 1. Demonstrate the collection, manipulation, and interpretation of data. 2. Construct, read, and interpret illustrations of data, including tables, graphs, and charts. 3. Formulate and solve problems that involve collecting and analyzing data. 4. Demonstrate an understanding and application of chance, manipulatives, guesses, etc. |
Communications
Students will: 1. Relate physical materials, pictures, and diagrams to mathematical ideas. 2. Reflect on and clarify thinking about mathematical ideas and situations. 3. Relate everyday language to mathematical language and symbols. 4. Use the skills of reading, listening, and viewing to interpret and evaluate mathematical ideas. 5. Model situations by using oral, written, concrete, pictorial, graphical, and algebraic methods. 6. Develop mathematical ideas, formulate mathematical definitions, and express generalizations discovered through investigations. 7. Ask clarifying and extending questions related to mathematics which students have read or heard about. 8. Appreciate the economy, power, and elegance of mathematical notation and its role in the development of mathematical ideas. Reasoning
Students will: 1. Draw logical conclusions about mathematics. 2. Use models, known facts, properties, and relationships to explain mathematical thinking. 3. Justify solutions and explain solutions' processes. 4. Use patterns and relationships to analyze mathematical situations. 5. Believe that mathematics makes sense. 6. Recognize and apply deductive and inductive reasoning. 7. Make and evaluate mathematical conjectures and arguments. 8. Make and test conjectures. 9. Follow logical arguments. 10. Judge the validity of arguments. 11. Appreciate the pervasive use and power of reasoning as a part of mathematics. |