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For Teachers

You already have enough tabs open. This page is the short version of how to get the most out of MathSheet Hub during a normal teaching week.

Use the standard code, not the keyword

Every worksheet on the site is tagged with its Common Core standard code (for example 4.NBT.5 or 3.OA.A.3). If you already know the standard you are teaching this week, type that code straight into the search box at the top. You will land on a focused list of every printable that addresses it, sorted from intro to challenge difficulty.

Build a five-day rotation in four minutes

Open the topic page for the strand you are teaching this week. From the cards, pick one Intro, two Practice, one Mastery, and one Challenge worksheet. That is your Monday-through-Friday rotation. Print all five at the start of the week and slide them into a folder by day. You will not need to re-open this site again until next Monday.

Sub folders without the panic

Pick three pages from the previous unit you have already taught. Print one copy per student of each. Add a one-sentence note for the substitute ("students may use a number line", "answer keys are at the bottom of the PDF") and you have a sub folder that will not waste an instructional day.

Spiral review without rebuilding the wheel

Once a week, print one worksheet from a topic you covered four to six weeks ago. Use it as a do-now. The students who internalized the skill will fly through it; the students who are slipping will quietly self-identify. That information is gold for small-group planning.

Differentiation without three lesson plans

Inside any topic page, the badges on each card show the difficulty (Intro, Practice, Mastery, Challenge) and the estimated time on task. For a single class period you can grab two pages on the same standard at different difficulty levels and run them side-by-side without writing two lesson plans.

Parent communication

Each worksheet page restates the underlying Common Core standard in plain language. When a parent asks "what is my child working on this week?", send them the link to the topic page. They will see the same standards, the same worksheets, and the same difficulty arc you do.

Things we deliberately do not do

We do not require accounts, gate worksheets behind email signups, sell student data, or run pop-up ads. If you have a colleague who has been burned by every "free" worksheet site that turned into a paywall, send them this page. The worksheets really are just printable.