Award-Winning 3rd Grade English
Tutors
Award-Winning
3rd Grade English
Tutors
Private 1-on-1 tutoring, weekly live classes for academic support, test prep & enrichment, practice tests and diagnostics, and more to elevate grades and test scores.
Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
UniversitiesSchools & Universities
DeliveredHours Delivered
ProficiencyGrowth in Proficiency
Who needs tutoring?
No obligation. Takes ~1 minute.

Julie
I am committed to providing academic support to students to help them reach their full potential. With a background in education and a passion for empowering learners, I strive to create a supportive ...
I'm a recent Stanford graduate (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science), and have been working at a major Management Consulting firm for a few years now. I personally scored a 2360 (out of 2400) ...
Kate
I'm available to tutor biology, chemistry, physics, math from Algebra up through AP Calculus, SAT test prep, and French. I've been tutoring students in science and math for 7 years. I also spent 8 mon...
Jessica
I am a licensed physician from Florida who is currently changing careers. I graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2009 and have extensive tutoring and editing experience. While a student, I...
Jeffrey
I am enrolled in the Mechanical Engineering PhD program at Rice University which will begin Fall 2020, and I am hoping to return to academia as a professor after earning my PhD. In the meantime, I am ...
I am available to tutor middle and high school math, history and test prep. I have tutored math and history in the past and I previously taught a test prep course at a school in Hanoi, Vietnam. I have...
I am a current student at the University of Chicago. I am working towards a Bachelor of Science in Biological Sciences, and I am on the pre-medical track. I am extremely passionate about tutoring, and...
Samantha
I'm a first-year medical student and recent graduate from Duke University, where I studied Global Health Determinants, Behaviors, and Interventions. From running a piano program at a nonprofit childre...
Earnest
I am comfortable with either setting. I'm confident that I can help you (or your student) achieve to the best of their ability, so please don't hesitate to get in touch!
Samuel
I am a freshman at Caltech majoring in Applied and Computational Mathematics. My favorite subject to tutor is math because I find it very rewarding to simplify complex topics to aid in understanding. ...
Testimonials
Because the right 3rd grade english tutor makes all the difference.
Average Session Rating – Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
Top 20 English Subjects
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
By the end of 3rd grade, students typically read at a level where they can understand grade-level texts independently, comprehend main ideas and key details, and begin making inferences about characters and plot. If your child is reading below grade level, a tutor can work on foundational skills like fluency, decoding multisyllabic words, and comprehension strategies—using texts at the right level to build confidence while gradually increasing complexity. Personalized instruction allows tutors to identify specific gaps (like struggling with vowel patterns or understanding cause-and-effect) and target those directly.
In 3rd grade, students move from simple sentences to basic paragraph structure—learning to write an introduction, supporting details, and a conclusion. Many struggle with staying on topic, organizing ideas in a logical order, or expanding sentences beyond basic statements. A tutor can teach explicit strategies like using graphic organizers (webs, outlines, or boxes-and-bullets) before writing, modeling how to turn ideas into complete sentences, and providing feedback on drafts. This hands-on approach helps students see writing as a process, not just a final product.
Both matter, but the approach differs. In 3rd grade, tutors prioritize mechanics that affect clarity—like capitalizing proper nouns, using periods and question marks correctly, and forming complete sentences—rather than drilling grammar rules in isolation. The most effective tutors weave grammar instruction into actual writing: they might point out a run-on sentence in a student's draft, explain why it needs a period, and have the student revise it. This connects rules to real writing, making them stick better than worksheets alone.
3rd graders benefit from learning to predict what happens next, ask questions while reading, visualize scenes, and identify the main idea. Many students read words fluently but don't understand what they've read—a common challenge at this grade level. Tutors teach these strategies explicitly by modeling them aloud (thinking out loud while reading), then gradually releasing responsibility to the student. During tutoring sessions, a tutor might pause mid-story to ask "What do you think will happen?" or "Why did the character do that?" to build active reading habits that stick.
Writer's block in 3rd grade often stems from perfectionism, lack of ideas, or not knowing how to continue once they start. Tutors combat this by teaching brainstorming techniques (like listing ideas, drawing pictures, or talking through a story first), breaking writing into manageable chunks, and normalizing rough drafts. A tutor might say "Let's just write one sentence about your favorite game, then we'll add more"—removing the pressure of a perfect final product. They also help students develop a personal writing voice by encouraging them to write about topics they care about, not just assigned prompts.
In 3rd grade, literary analysis is still concrete—students learn to identify characters, describe settings, explain what characters want and why, and recognize simple themes (like "teamwork helps" or "honesty matters"). Many struggle to move beyond plot summary to discuss why a character acts a certain way or what the author is teaching. Tutors scaffold this by asking guided questions: "How did the character feel? What made them feel that way? Would you do the same thing?" This helps students practice inferencing and connect to the text on a deeper level than simple recall.
Fluency means reading smoothly at an appropriate pace without stopping to decode every word; expression means reading with proper intonation and emphasis that matches the meaning (like reading a question with an upward tone or an excited sentence with energy). By 3rd grade, students should move beyond choppy, word-by-word reading, but many still struggle with both fluency and expression. Tutors improve this through repeated readings of engaging texts, modeling expressive reading aloud, and having students practice reading dialogue with different voices. This makes reading feel more natural and helps students understand that reading is about meaning, not just saying words correctly.
Learning words in context is far more effective than memorization alone. In 3rd grade, students encounter new vocabulary through reading and should learn to use context clues (looking at surrounding words and sentences) to figure out meaning. Tutors teach this by pausing during reading to discuss unfamiliar words, asking "What clues help you guess what this word means?" and then connecting the word to the student's own experiences. This approach builds independence—students learn a strategy they can use with any new word—rather than relying on flashcards or definitions they'll forget after the test.
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