


The Story of the World Volume 3 Activity Book
Flexible, hands-on activities that deepen early modern history learning—use as much or as little as fits your family’s style.
$43.95
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2026 Third-Grade Curriculum Kit
The Story of the World Volume 3: Early Modern Times Activity Book
Reading about explorers, revolutions, emperors, and expanding civilizations is one thing. Building maps, creating projects, playing games, and interacting with those events is where many students start making lasting connections.
Designed to accompany The Story of the World Volume 3 history text, this Activity Book extends lessons covering world history from 1600 to 1850 through hands-on activities, geography work, projects, discussion prompts, and additional reading suggestions.
Students reinforce lessons through activities such as:- Geography exercises and map work
- Review questions and sample narrations
- Coloring pages and hands-on projects
- Historical games and creative activities
- Literature suggestions and encyclopedia connections
- Research activities and extension ideas
Students might pan for gold, color historical figures such as Captain Cook, create Ottoman-inspired designs, play historical games, or explore activities connected to major historical events from the Early Modern period.
Activity suggestions are designed primarily for grades 1–4 but can easily be adapted for grades 5–6.
Because the Activity Book includes multiple activity types, families can choose projects that fit their schedule, teaching style, and student interests rather than feeling pressured to complete every option.
Whether students are mapping, building, researching, discussing, coloring, or creating, the goal is simple: help Early Modern history become something students actively interact with rather than simply read about.

Find answers to the most frequently asked questions about this product below:
Families can successfully begin with whatever time period most interests them. Some families prefer starting with ancient times and unraveling the story sequentially until modern times. Yet because the full scope of history is taught repeatedly up through high school, it is okay to skip volumes, knowing that the same events will be covered later.








