







Ace your grammar, improve your grades―125 simple exercises for grades 6, 7, and 8
Grammar is an essential part of the sixth, seventh, and eighth grade curriculum. With The English Grammar Workbook for Grades 6, 7, and 8, students will build a strong foundation for understanding the concepts of grammar and using them effectively when reading, writing, or speaking.
This grammar workbook offers students the flexibility to learn at their own pace while providing the structure they need to successfully retain essential grammar rules, such as parts of speech, sentence structure, phrases and clauses, active and passive voice, mood, punctuation, writing style, and more.
Inside the pages of this grammar workbook, you’ll find:
Basics and building blocks―Students can progress at their own pace and build their knowledge as they go.
Engaging lessons and reviews―Strengthen students’ learning and skill retention with simple reviews after every three lessons.
Practical quizzes and answers―Prepare students for real-world grammar usage with helpful quizzes and an easy-to-navigate answer key.
Make learning the fundamental concepts of grammar easy and organized.
From the Publisher


Make the grade with this grammar workbook:

Advance your skills
Practice grammar at your own pace with lessons progressing from simple concepts to complex grammar usage.

Check on progress
Make sure students are keeping up with grammar lessons with easy reviews after every 3 lessons.

Test your knowledge
Helpful quizzes and an easy-to-navigate answer key will prepare students for using grammar in their daily lives.
Publisher : Callisto
Publication date : September 18, 2018
Edition : Workbook
Language : English
Print length : 268 pages
ISBN-10 : 1641520825
ISBN-13 : 978-1641520829
Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
Reading age : 10 – 14 years
Dimensions : 8 x 0.66 x 10 inches
Part of series : English Grammar Workbooks
Best Sellers Rank: #13,945 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #4 in Grammar Reference (Books) #8 in Study & Teaching Reference (Books)
Customer Reviews: 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (2,341) var dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction; P.when(‘A’, ‘ready’).execute(function(A) { if (dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction !== true) { dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction = true; A.declarative( ‘acrLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault”: true }, function (event) { if (window.ue) { ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } } ); } }); P.when(‘A’, ‘cf’).execute(function(A) { A.declarative(‘acrStarsLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault” : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } }); });
13 reviews for The English Grammar Workbook for Grades 6, 7, and 8: 125+ Simple Exercises to Improve Grammar, Punctuation, and Word Usage
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Brenda Loomis Drexler –
Great Content, but Needs Companion Workbook
I follow this author on Teacher Pay Teachers. She is well versed in her skills. I do think the book would be better if it had a companion book that was a workbook where the pages were laid out for student use in larger font. A traditional workbook would have pages that students could tear out and turn in. This would make this book a lot easier to use! I do love the book, but I will have to make up additional worksheets for my students because my school does not provide additional funds for books like this and I need something I can hand out. Content is great, but needs to be more practical.
Medgine Germain –
Great
Very useful
Liz –
Pretty good overall.
This product includes a lesson on inclusive pronouns. For those who support that, you will be glad to know. For those who don’t support that, you will also be glad to know.
Daniel F. Salazar –
A must to build basic English grammar skills
Niece is challenged in using this book to build her English grammar. We are getting good results on her using this book to study grammar.
Marcos –
Excellent book.
Excellent book. Recommended for its simplicity.
H. DeJ –
The best grammar book I have found for middle school!
It’s my go-to book for tutoring students. Moss covers all the essential topics in an engaging and practical way. Students learn essential grammar for writing without getting bogged down in the minute details.
Beverly C –
Best way to teach yourself the English Language.
Learning how to read and write where it is a well-written document is critical to getting ahead in this world today regardless if you are 6 years old or 60 years old.Starting with the basics is a must and this book give you lots of practice doing this in small short lessons, even having online access to more practice lessons. Great way to learn even if English is your second language.
Sandy McQuerry –
Not for rusty adults
In hopes of strengthening my writing, I decided to start out “easy” by purchasing a grammar workbook for 6th, 7th, and 8th grades. I plowed in like a spoon in a bowl of Hudsonville Seaside Carmel Ice Cream.Nouns went okay. Before the first lesson, I remembered there were proper nouns and not-proper nouns but not too much else. Compound nouns seemed fairly basic. But who knew “ice cream” is a compound noun but “cookie dough” is likely not? A little complicated if you ask me. But I did learn a secret. If you want to ditch the adjective, just stick a hyphen between words and voila, it automatically becomes a two-word compound noun. “Cookie-dough” with the hyphen is suddenly a compounder. Although Word Grammar Check discourages willy-nilly hyphens, just ignore the blue line or click on the “Don’t check for this issue” option.The grip of the spoon got a little sticky with the second lesson-pronouns. I knew “you,” “we,” “they,” etc. But I was a little shaky on the recall with “everyone,” “either,” and “some.” But did you know there are eight kinds of pronouns- personal, reflexive, intensive, demonstrative, relative, interrogative, and indefinite- both singular and plural? Ugh! Bored myself just typing those and no, it was not from memory. I began to think “Who cares?” and “Do I really need to know this? Can’t I just write with bad grammar and blame it on the way I talk?” But I completed all the exercises albeit with a lot less gusto.On the first of two tests on nouns and pronouns, I missed six out of 28 – C+. I got a C+ on 6th grade level material! Egad! I got 100% on the next test because I made it a completely untimed, open-book-test. (Bonus- three-word compound noun.)No positive recommendations for this workbook, as I hold the author somewhat accountable for my frosty comprehension. I even questioned if her answer key was completely accurate. And was the workbook truly grade appropriate? Sixth graders not only have to learn the names of eight kinds of pronouns but the meaning of each with examples? Bless their middle-school hearts! All respect due to kids who are required to learn that yawn content! But then they have absorbent, fluffy brains and mine is riddled with cholesterol. (Maybe from too much ice cream.)Before I tackle verbs and prepositions and predicates and punctuation, maybe I ought to ratchet back a little. Maybe all I need is 3rd grade grammar, 5th grade tops.
MP –
It is really good and it tests the knowledge of the in the end of each chapter with test.
Sandra D. –
Correspond a mes attentes- Fonctionne parfaitement!
Benedicte suzuki –
Le livre semble bien mais a mis beaucoup de temps à venir
Amazon Customer –
Just what I wanted.
Sim –
The book is okay, but like all grammar books, it’s a bit dry and boring at times.I’m using this to teach my kids, but this doesn’t work well as a workbook where I can just give it to them and have them work on their own. I need to sit beside them and explain things.There are some more advance examples in here, which is nice.