

This Grade 3 worksheet focuses on Using Capital Letters in Titles and Headings, helping young learners understand how and when to capitalize important words in headings, book titles, charts, posters, and sentence-style titles. Through engaging, structured exercises, students practice applying capitalization rules in meaningful, real-life school contexts.
Correct capitalization is a key grammar skill that improves clarity and presentation. For Grade 3 learners, this topic is important because:
1. Titles and headings require specific capitalization rules.
2. Important words in titles (nouns, verbs, adjectives) begin with capital letters.
3. Proper capitalization improves formal writing and project work.
4. It builds confidence in writing posters, charts, book titles, and school notices.
This worksheet includes five grammar-rich activities that build mastery of capital letters in titles and headings:
Exercise 1 – Multiple Choice Questions
Students choose the correctly capitalized word to complete different school-related titles such as Assembly Rules, Homework Planner, and Sports Practice Schedule.
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
Using a word bank (Blue, Rainy, Ancient, Busy, Green, Magical, Big, Happy, Bright, Peaceful), students complete meaningful titles by applying correct capitalization rules.
Exercise 3 – Match the Following
Students match pictures with correctly capitalized titles like “Ravi’s Mountain Adventure,” “Family Trip to Goa,” and “A Day at Science Fair.”
Exercise 4 – Underline and Circle
Learners identify correctly capitalized sentences and spot incorrect ones, strengthening their understanding of proper nouns and title-style capitalization.
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Writing with Titles
Students complete a paragraph by inserting meaningful, properly capitalized titles, applying everything they’ve learned in context.
This worksheet strengthens grammar accuracy, presentation skills, and attention to detail — all essential for school projects and creative writing tasks.
Exercise 1 – Choose the Correct Word
1. Daily
2. Weekly
3. School
4. Our
5. Healthy
6. Tasty
7. Important
8. Annual
9. Class
10. Regular
Exercise 2 – Fill in the Blanks
1. Magical Storybook of Fairy Tales
2. Visit to an Ancient Mosque
3. A Rainy Morning in the Monsoon
4. Journey Along the Blue River
5. A Busy Market Day
6. A Happy Ending to the Story
7. Walk in a Green Park
8. The Bright Sky After Sunrise
9. Trip Through the Big Forest
10. Crossing the Peaceful Bridge
Exercise 3 – Match the Following
1. Monsoon Morning Walk
2. Family Trip to Goa
3. Ravi’s Mountain Adventure
4. Visit to the City Zoo
5. A Day at Science Fair
6. School Annual Day
7. Plant a Tree Day
8. Evening Cricket Match
9. Show and Tell Event
10. Grandparents’ House Visit
Exercise 4 – Underline the Correct Sentences
Correct Sentences:
1. The School Bell Rings Every Morning.
4. Ravi Lives Near the Big Park.
6. The Teacher Checks Homework Daily.
7. Mumbai Is a Busy City.
9. Children Enjoy Stories in Class.
Incorrect Sentences:
2. the school bell rings every morning.
3. ravi lives near the big park.
5. the Teacher checks homework daily.
8. mumbai is a busy city.
10. children enjoy stories in class.
Exercise 5 – Paragraph Completion
Answers may vary. (Ensure all inserted titles follow correct capitalization rules.)
Help your child build polished writing skills and master capitalization rules with structured guidance and expert support today.
In Class 3 grammar, important words like nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs begin with capital letters in titles, while small words such as and, in, or the are usually lowercase unless they start the title.
Correct capitalization helps early learners understand sentence structure and proper writing format, which is a key skill in CBSE English assessments.
Parents can encourage children to rewrite book or story titles correctly, helping them apply Class 3 grammar rules through daily English worksheet practice.