This Grade 3 line plots Easy 2 worksheet builds reading fluency with whole-number data. Grade 3 students count Xs above values for pets, books, and siblings to answer simple questions about how many students chose each value. Sentence corrections, fill-ins, and true or false items reinforce that one X equals one student, that empty columns mean zero, and that totals come from adding every X on the line plot.

Style:
Busy Bee
Line Plots
Grade 3
★ Part A: Fix the Sentence
Each sentence has an error. Rewrite it correctly on the line.
1) Fix the sentence:
To count students with 2 pets in Grade 3, add the Xs on every number.
Rewrite: To count students with 2 pets in Grade 3, count only the Xs above 2.
2) Fix the sentence:
If 5 Xs are above 3 books in a Grade 3 line plot, then 3 students read books.
Rewrite: If 5 Xs are above 3 books in a Grade 3 line plot, then 5 students read 3 books.
3) Fix the sentence:
A Grade 3 line plot of siblings shows the same student more than once.
Rewrite: A Grade 3 line plot of siblings shows each student only once.
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) A Grade 3 line plot has 4 Xs above 1 pet, so 4 students have 1 pet.
2) On a Grade 3 books-read line plot, 0 Xs above 5 books means 0 students read 5 books.
3) If a Grade 3 line plot shows 2 Xs above 0 siblings, 2 students have no siblings.
4) On a Grade 3 line plot, the column above 4 has the tallest stack, so 4 is the most common value.
★ Part C: True or False?
Read each statement. Circle True or False.
1) A Grade 3 line plot of pets with 3 Xs above 0 means 3 students have no pets.
True
False
2) On a Grade 3 line plot, you should count Xs by adding the numbers below them.
True
False
3) If a Grade 3 line plot has 6 total Xs, then 6 students were surveyed.
True
False
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