Sentence Types Worksheet: Simple, Compound, or Complex
Sentence structure is one of those skills that helps everything else click—reading comprehension, writing clarity, and editing. Around Grade 3, students start noticing that sentences can be built in different ways. Some sentences share one complete thought. Others combine two complete thoughts. And some add an extra “starter” part that can’t stand alone.
This sentence types worksheet gives students a quick, confidence-building way to practice three important sentence types:
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Simple sentences (one complete thought)
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Compound sentences (two complete thoughts joined with a comma and a conjunction)
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Complex sentences (a complete thought plus a dependent part that starts with words like because, when, or if)
A short key at the top reminds students what to look for, and the included answer key makes it easy to check work or use for quick review.
Why this Skill Matters
By third grade, students are ready to do more than just write a sentence. They’re learning how sentences work and how to fix them when something sounds off. When students can tell the difference between simple, compound, and complex sentences, they’re more likely to:
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vary sentence structure in writing (so it doesn’t feel repetitive)
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combine ideas clearly instead of creating run-ons
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recognize clue words like because/when/if, and understand how those words connect ideas
Teaching Tip (Quick and Easy)
Try this 60-second routine before students begin:
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Read one sentence aloud.
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Ask: “Do we have one complete thought or two?”
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If it’s two, look for a comma + conjunction (like and, but, so).
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If it begins with because/when/if, it’s usually complex.
What’s included
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1 printable worksheet (10 sentences)
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complete answer key