Practice makes perfect, and these exercises that focus on contractions with apostrophes give your student the ability to work independently while still providing helpful hints when needed.
Are you working on proper nouns with your second graders? Inject a little creativity into your students' day with this worksheet! Students will get to help write a story by identifying and writing their own proper nouns while filling in the blanks.
Use this lesson to help students identify the elements of a fictional text while gaining more knowledge about parts of speech. Use as a stand alone activity or a support lesson for Fairy Tales: Identifying Story Elements.
Build your child's foundation for reading, beat by beat. Kids will count syllables and break words down into smaller parts with this book, for stronger reading, spelling and word skills.
Strong narratives have clear sequences of events. Through this lesson, students plan out what will happen in their story before they start writing their own engaging narratives.
Create present tense verbs! Kids can put together the suffix -ing with the words on this worksheet like puzzle pieces to memorize common spelling patterns.
With the help of picture clues, kids will find two words that make a single compound word. Have your child put "sun" and "flower" together in this worksheet.
Irregular past tense verbs are tricky, but a little practice can go a long way! Use this worksheet to help your students understand how to use those tricky words in context.
Word puzzles are an effective and entertaining way to practice irregular past tense verbs with your students. Let your budding wordsmiths have fun reviewing those tricky past tense verbs with this crossword puzzle!
Have your students mastered irregular plural nouns? Give your kids some extra practice with this worksheet that has them identifying and using irregular plural nouns as context clues. This works great as either a challenging activity or as an assessment.
Can your second graders differentiate between singular and plural nouns? Let's find out! Use this sorting activity to let your students distinguish between singular and plural using regular and irregular plural nouns.