Third Grade Math
PEIMS Course Title/Number:
Mathematics 3/02640030
Prerequisite Requirements:
Course completion or grade-level placement by K12 placement exam.
Course of Instruction/Lesson Description:
The K12 Math program offers a carefully structured sequence of lessons designed to help students make steady progress from fundamental skills to more complex mathematical concepts. Third grade math students continue to develop computational skills in addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, and solve problems involving more complex mathematical concepts.
The instructional plan for the primary grades emphasizes:
An active, multisensory, hands-on approach, using manipulatives—such as counters, place-value rods, shapes, and blocks—to ensure that children understand the concrete realities that underlie mathematical concepts (such as shape, length, quantity, more and less, addition and subtraction).
Regular practice, review, and assessment to ensure mastery of basic skills.
Online games and animations to motivate, instruct, and illustrate concepts.
A typical daily lesson is structured as follows:
Skills Update: Usually in an online activity, the student reviews concepts and reinforces skills from previous lessons.
Teach: New skills and concepts are introduced and explained, sometimes through online activities or animations.
Practice: The student practices by applying skills and concepts introduced in the lesson.
Lesson Assessment: The student takes a brief assessment to check understanding of the lesson objectives.
Beyond the Lesson: If the student wishes, he or she can complete optional activities, such as extra practice or "Challenge" problems.
Major course expectations include the following. Students will:
Work with and communicate about larger numbers and decimals.
Study place value and estimating using rounding.
Develop calculation skills using place value blocks to understand addition, subtraction, and regrouping.
Establish fluency with simple addition, subtraction, division, and multiplication number facts.
Conduct and interpret simple probability experiments.
Collect statistical data and use bar charts and pictographs to organize or represent data.
Use fraction models, names, and symbols to demonstrate understanding of fraction concepts.
Add and subtract fractions and decimals.
Measure perimeters of geometric shapes.
Measure temperature and time.
Use graphs and charts to understand how data can be represented visually.
Name, compare, and describe geometric shapes.
Use objects, words, pictures, and numbers to communicate strategies for solving word problems.
Lesson Numbers/Duration:
180 total, including 22 optional.
Online Importance:
K12's Math program provides step-by-step guidance in each lesson. Some activities are presented online, while others are presented offline.
Important activities are available only online, such as math games or computer animations. These activities range from skills update activities that help keep the student's skills sharp, to games that reinforce crucial concepts and skills. The skills and concepts that are taught and reinforced with online activities are ones that research has shown are key to understanding mathematics.
The Teacher Guide provides explanatory information as well as information about assessment and supplemental material to support each student. The Teacher Guide is available as printed material as well as online.
Monitoring Student Progress:
Most units end with an assessment. The assessment helps the teacher gauge whether the student has met the unit objectives. Assessment results are entered online, to be tracked by the Online School application.
Students and parents can access student-specific screens to determine (1) progress in the number of lessons completed, (2) the lesson assessment (percentage mastered), (3) the semester assessment (percentage mastered), and (4) the number of times the student has taken the assessment instruments. Families who enroll their children in the eCP program have the benefit of help and guidance from an experienced teacher. The teacher will contact students daily through email and phone conferences. Consistent progress monitoring by the teacher will be utilized throughout the project period.
Schedule for Monitoring Student Progress:
Each teacher will establish a daily contact schedule for their assigned students at a time of day that is reasonably convenient for both parties. Contacts may be asynchronous/synchronous or one-on-one/groups. The avenues of teacher initiated contact will be adjusted as determined by the progress a student makes through their learning plan. Parent- and student-initiated contact with teachers can happen at any time. The Acting Director, or their designee, will monitor the communication logs to ensure that parents are being routinely supported and informed regarding the student's ongoing progress and participation.
In addition, teachers will monitor progress in mastery of objectives and lesson completion on a weekly basis. Continuous progress monitoring by the assigned teacher ensures that parents are informed on a regular basis regarding progress and participation.
Required Instructional Materials
Materials K12 provides:
K12 Math Textbook, Grade 3
Base 10 Deluxe Set
Other materials:
Notebook
Coins and bills or printouts of provided sheets
Standardized Assessment Instruments:
End-of-Course Exams developed by Texas Tech, University of Texas, or K12 Inc.
Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) Compliancy:
Side-by-side comparisons of TEKS and the content of each course have been developed and reviewed to ensure that the online curriculum meets or exceeds the TEKS.
Grading/Credit Award Criteria:
The Texas Virtual Academy at Southwest Schools issues formal report cards every nine weeks. Students who complete a significant amount of coursework after the conclusion of the final term will receive a supplemental report card in July. The final grade in each content subject, English/Language Arts, mathematics, Social Studies, and Science, is determined by a combination of the grades from each reporting period and the proctored course completion (CCE) exam. The average of the grades for each reporting period is comprised of 90% of the final grade. The scores of the CCE comprise 10% of the final grade.
The final grade for electives is based on cumulative progress recorded in the Online School (OLS). A grade of Completed, or C, is reported for 80% or more of the lessons marked as completed. A grade of Incomplete/Unacceptable, or I, is reported when less that 80% of the lessons are marked as completed. No Grade, or NG, is assigned if the student has administrative approval to waive the course requirements in a particular elective course.
To be promoted to the next grade, the student must meet the Student Success Initiative requirements for that grade. Additionally, the student must have a final score of 70 or above on at least three content courses and the average of the four content courses must be at least 70. For each reporting period, the grade in a content area subject is the average of at least six distinct grades. Those grades include, but are not limited to, the progress in the OLS converted to a numerical grade, response to the daily questions, online quizzes following the weekly grade-level study halls, work samples, and benchmark assessments.
Contact Information:
Students will be assigned a teacher upon acceptance into TXVA@SW. The teacher will provide the student and family telephone and email contact information. The student and/or family may contact a help desk at 1-886-YOUR K12 for additional technical, material, or logistical support. Students will be provided with online assistance 24/7 through the TXVA web site.

