Why grade-aligned practice matters
Math is a stair-stepped subject. A student who skips the rung between Grade 2 place value and Grade 3 multiplication will lean on counting strategies long past the point where they should be reaching for fact recall. The Common Core State Standards were designed to make that staircase visible: each grade has a small set of major work clusters, and each cluster builds on the one before it.
Our grade pages mirror that structure. When you pick a grade above, you see every worksheet we have for that grade in one place, with the Common Core standard code on every card so you can match it to your scope-and-sequence document, your district pacing guide, or your homeschool planner.
Each printable includes a worked example at the top, ten practice problems, and an answer key. For more on the Common Core grade-level expectations, see the K-8 math standards overview.