
This parent guide supports parents in helping their child at home with the 2nd Grade English Language Arts content.
- Subject:
- English Language Arts
- Material Type:
- Curriculum
- Reference Material
- Vocabulary
- Author:
- AMBER GARVEY
- Date Added:
- 03/20/2023
This parent guide supports parents in helping their child at home with the 2nd Grade English Language Arts content.
This unit was created by the Rethink Education Content Development Team. This course is aligned to the NC Standards for 2nd Grade ELA in Language.
The central idea of this unit is how sharing artifacts is a fundamental characteristic of humans that connects them to each other and culture.
In this lesson, students will write free-verse acrostic poems about themselves using the letters of their names to begin each line. They then write an additional acrostic poem about something that is important to them. After proofreading, both poems are recopied or typed and illustrated and then mounted on construction paper for display. Several opportunities for sharing and peer review are incorporated.
Students can work together to brainstorm and create lists of verbs for each of the letters of the alphabet in this interactive activity. Then, choosing one verb for each letter, or letters of their choice, they can create pages for an Action Alphabet book. Each page includes an illustration and a sentence using the verb in context or students can create a chart with all of the verbs listed.
This is a digital anchor chart.
Students will learn about the characteristics of butterflies and will engage in multiple activities to build their understanding of how a butterfly’s characteristics help it survive and interact with its environment. In this CCSS lesson students will use text dependent questions, academic vocabulary, and writing assignments.
In this lesson, students complete two prewriting activities, one on brainstorming ideas using story maps, and one on creating beginnings of stories. They then work on two collaborative-writing activities in which they draft an "oversized" story on chart paper. Each student works individually to read what has been written before, adds the "next sentence," and passes the developing story on to another student. The story is passed from student to student until the story is complete. In a later lesson Collaborative Stories 2: Revising, the story is revised by the groups.
Teachers can use this resource to explain what collective nouns are and provide examples so that students may understand this concept.
This interactive resource contains an informational video, practice exercies, and a game about collective nouns.
Students will review collective and compound nouns by answering multiple choice questions about each noun type.
"Reading like writers," students will explore the ways that stories are structured; then, "writing like writers," students explore organizational structures in their own writing. Students listen to a reading of Long Night Moon, a circular story. Nexzt, they develop their own examples of circular stories which they share out with their peers.
This is a digital anchor chart.
In this unit, students will read and explore a folktale from Vietnam, while utilizing interdisciplinary connections in language arts, geography, science and social studies. Opportunities are provided for differentiated instruction as well as the development of story vocabulary. Terms include: narrator, point
of view, main character, dialogue, setting, title and quotation marks.
This resource contains three different choices for interactive games: nouns, verbs, or nouns and verbs. Students will help a monkey collect 10 scoops of ice cream by finding nouns and verbs in the sentences provided.
In this lesson, students will read Laura Joffe Numeroff's 'If You Give a Mouse a Cookie' to combine word-skill work with prediction and sequencing practice. Students learn about cause-effect relationships during a shared reading of the book and then complete a cloze exercise that uses context and initial consonant clues. Students then create story circles that display the events of the story and use these circles to retell the story to a peer. Finally, the students compose their own stories featuring themselves in the role of the mouse.
In this lesson, students will learn about irregular plural nouns through a number of different activities. Students will read 'One Foot Two Feet' by Peter Maloney and Felicia Zekauskas, they will make a flower craft with irregular plural nouns, and much more.
Students form and use frequently occuring irregular plural nouns.
This worksheet includes reminders on how to make nouns plural and a review activity so students can demonstrate what they learned.
Grimy Gators are popping out of the city sewers! Remember your subject-verb agreement rules to get rid of them. Read the subject at the top of the screen, then click on the verbs which agree with that subject.