Grade 3 Math Common Core Curriculum Standards
Bold-faced standards are the MDIRSS essential standards and the standards in regular font are supporting standards. Click on the green MDIRSS standards to see the unpacked version, list of resources, and corresponding performance rubric for that standard.
Operations and Algebraic Thinking (3.OA)
3.MA.OA.1 Represent and solve problems involving multiplication and division.
3.MA.OA.2 Understand properties of multiplication and the relationship between multiplication and division.
3.MA.OA.3 Multiply and divide within 100.
3.MA.OA.4 Solve problems involving the four operations, and identify and explain patterns in arithmetic.
Number and Operations in Base Ten (3.NBT)
3.MA.NBT.1 Use place value understanding and properties of operations to perform multi-digit arithmetic.
Number and Operations—Fractions (3.NF)
3.MA.NF.1 Develop understanding of fractions as numbers.
Measurement and Data (3.MD)
3.MA.MD.1 Solve problems involving measurement and estimation of intervals of time, liquid volumes, and masses of objects.
3.MA.MD.2 Represent and interpret data.
3.MA.MD.3 Geometric measurement: understand concepts of area and relate area to multiplication and to addition.
3.MA.MD.4 Geometric measurement: recognize perimeter as an attribute of plane figures and distinguish between linear and area measures.
Geometry (3.G)
3.MA.G.1 Reason with shapes and their attributes.
Mathematical Practices
Operations and Algebraic Thinking (3.OA)
3.MA.OA.1 Represent and solve problems involving multiplication and division.
3.MA.OA.2 Understand properties of multiplication and the relationship between multiplication and division.
3.MA.OA.3 Multiply and divide within 100.
7. Fluently multiply and divide within 100, using strategies such as the relationship between multiplication and division (e.g., knowing that 8 × 5 = 40, one knows 40 ÷ 5 = 8) or properties of operations. By the end of Grade 3, know from memory all products of two one-digit numbers.
3.MA.OA.4 Solve problems involving the four operations, and identify and explain patterns in arithmetic.
8. Solve two-step word problems using the four operations. Represent these problems using equations with a letter standing for the unknown quantity. Assess the reasonableness of answers using mental computation and estimation strategies including rounding.3
Number and Operations in Base Ten (3.NBT)
3.MA.NBT.1 Use place value understanding and properties of operations to perform multi-digit arithmetic.4
Number and Operations—Fractions5 (3.NF)
3.MA.NF.1 Develop understanding of fractions as numbers.
b. Represent a fraction a/b on a number line diagram by marking off a lengths 1/b from 0. Recognize that the resulting interval has size a/b and that its endpoint locates the number a/b on the number line.
b. Recognize and generate simple equivalent fractions, e.g., 1/2 = 2/4, 4/6 = 2/3). Explain why the fractions are equivalent, e.g., by using a visual fraction model.
c. Express whole numbers as fractions, and recognize fractions that are equivalent to whole numbers. Examples: Express 3 in the form 3 = 3/1; recognize that 6/1 = 6; locate 4/4 and 1 at the same point of a number line diagram.
d. Compare two fractions with the same numerator or the same denominator by reasoning about their size. Recognize that comparisons are valid only when the two fractions refer to the same whole. Record the results of comparisons with the symbols >, =, or <, and justify the conclusions, e.g., by using a visual fraction model.
Measurement and Data (3.MD)
3.MA.MD.1 Solve problems involving measurement and estimation of intervals of time, liquid volumes, and masses of objects.
3.MA.MD.2 Represent and interpret data.
more” and “how many less” problems using information presented in scaled bar graphs. For example, draw a bar graph in which each square in
the bar graph might represent 5 pets.
4. Generate measurement data by measuring lengths using rulers marked with halves and fourths of an inch. Show the data by making a line
plot, where the horizontal scale is marked off in appropriate units— whole numbers, halves, or quarters.
3.MA.MD.3 Geometric measurement: understand concepts of area and relate area to multiplication and to addition.
5. Recognize area as an attribute of plane figures and understand concepts of area measurement.
b. A plane figure which can be covered without gaps or overlaps by n unit squares is said to have an area of n square units.
in, square ft, and improvised units).
a. Find the area of a rectangle with whole-number side lengths by tiling it, and show that the area is the same as would be found by multiplying the side lengths.
b. Multiply side lengths to find areas of rectangles with wholenumber side lengths in the context of solving real world and mathematical problems, and represent whole-number products as rectangular areas in mathematical reasoning.
c. Use tiling to show in a concrete case that the area of a rectangle with whole-number side lengths a and b + c is the sum of a × b and a × c. Use area models to represent the distributive property in mathematical reasoning.
d. Recognize area as additive. Find areas of rectilinear figures by decomposing them into non-overlapping rectangles and adding the areas of the non-overlapping parts, applying this technique to solve real world problems.
3.MA.MD.4 Geometric measurement: recognize perimeter as an attribute of plane figures and distinguish between linear and area measures.
8. Solve real world and mathematical problems involving perimeters of polygons, including finding the perimeter given the side lengths, finding an unknown side length, and exhibiting rectangles with the same perimeter and different areas or with the same area and different perimeters.
Geometry (3.G)
3.MA.G.1 Reason with shapes and their attributes.


