Alabama: Grade 2 Math Standards
14 standards · 32 domains
USE ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION WITHIN 100 TO SOLVE ONE- AND TWO-STEP WORD PROBLEMS BY USING DRAWINGS AND EQUATIONS WITH A SYMBOL FOR THE UNKNOWN NUMBER TO REPRESENT THE PROBLEM.
FLUENTLY ADD AND SUBTRACT WITHIN 100, USING STRATEGIES BASED ON PLACE VALUE, PROPERTIES OF OPERATIONS, AND/OR THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION.
USE A VARIETY OF STRATEGIES TO ADD UP TO FOUR TWO-DIGIT NUMBERS.
ADD AND SUBTRACT WITHIN 1000 USING CONCRETE MODELS OR DRAWINGS AND STRATEGIES BASED ON PLACE VALUE, PROPERTIES OF OPERATIONS, AND/OR THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION; RELATE THE STRATEGY TO A WRITTEN METHOD.
- 2.12.a Explain that in adding or subtracting three-digit numbers, one adds or subtracts hundreds and hundreds, tens and tens, ones and ones; and sometimes it is necessary to compose or decompose tens or hundreds.
MENTALLY ADD AND SUBTRACT 10 OR 100 TO A GIVEN NUMBER BETWEEN 100 AND 900.
EXPLAIN WHY ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION STRATEGIES WORK, USING PLACE VALUE AND THE PROPERTIES OF OPERATIONS.
MEASURE LENGTHS OF SEVERAL OBJECTS TO THE NEAREST WHOLE UNIT.
- 2.15.a Create a line plot where the horizontal scale is marked off in whole-number units to show the lengths of several measured objects.
CREATE A PICTURE GRAPH AND BAR GRAPH TO REPRESENT DATA WITH UP TO FOUR CATEGORIES.
MEASURE THE LENGTH OF AN OBJECT BY SELECTING AND USING STANDARD UNITS OF MEASUREMENT SHOWN ON RULERS, YARDSTICKS, METER STICKS, OR MEASURING TAPES.
MEASURE OBJECTS WITH TWO DIFFERENT UNITS, AND DESCRIBE HOW THE TWO MEASUREMENTS RELATE TO EACH OTHER AND THE SIZE OF THE UNIT CHOSEN.
ESTIMATE LENGTHS USING THE FOLLOWING STANDARD UNITS OF MEASUREMENT: INCHES, FEET, CENTIMETERS, AND METERS.
FLUENTLY ADD AND SUBTRACT WITHIN 20 USING MENTAL STRATEGIES SUCH AS COUNTING ON, MAKING TEN, DECOMPOSING A NUMBER LEADING TO TEN, USING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION, AND CREATING EQUIVALENT BUT EASIER OR KNOWN SUMS.
- 2.2.a State automatically all sums of two one-digit numbers.
MEASURE TO DETERMINE HOW MUCH LONGER ONE OBJECT IS THAN ANOTHER, EXPRESSING THE LENGTH DIFFERENCE OF THE TWO OBJECTS USING STANDARD UNITS OF LENGTH.
USE ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION WITHIN 100 TO SOLVE WORD PROBLEMS INVOLVING SAME UNITS OF LENGTH, REPRESENTING THE PROBLEM WITH DRAWINGS (SUCH AS DRAWINGS OF RULERS) AND/OR EQUATIONS WITH A SYMBOL FOR THE UNKNOWN NUMBER.
CREATE A NUMBER LINE DIAGRAM USING WHOLE NUMBERS AND USE IT TO REPRESENT WHOLE-NUMBER SUMS AND DIFFERENCES WITHIN 100.
TELL AND WRITE TIME FROM ANALOG AND DIGITAL CLOCKS TO THE NEAREST FIVE MINUTES, USING A.M. AND P.M.
- 2.23.a Express an understanding of common terms such as, but not limited to, quarter past, half past, and quarter to.
SOLVE PROBLEMS WITH MONEY.
IDENTIFY TRIANGLES, QUADRILATERALS, PENTAGONS, HEXAGONS, AND CUBES.
- 2.25.a Recognize and draw shapes having specified attributes.
PARTITION A RECTANGLE INTO ROWS AND COLUMNS OF SAME-SIZE SQUARES, AND COUNT TO FIND THE TOTAL NUMBER OF SQUARES.
PARTITION CIRCLES AND RECTANGLES INTO TWO, THREE, OR FOUR EQUAL SHARES. DESCRIBE THE SHARES USING SUCH TERMS AS HALVES, THIRDS, HALF OF, OR A THIRD OF, AND DESCRIBE THE WHOLE AS TWO HALVES, THREE THIRDS, OR FOUR FOURTHS.
- 2.27.a Explain that equal shares of identical wholes need not have the same shape.
USE CONCRETE OBJECTS TO DETERMINE WHETHER A GROUP OF UP TO 20 OBJECTS IS EVEN OR ODD.
- 2.3.a Write an equation to express an even number as a sum of two equal addends.
USING CONCRETE AND PICTORIAL REPRESENTATIONS AND REPEATED ADDITION, DETERMINE THE TOTAL NUMBER OF OBJECTS IN A RECTANGULAR ARRAY WITH UP TO 5 ROWS AND UP TO 5 COLUMNS.
- 2.4.a Write an equation to express the total number of objects in a rectangular array with up to 5 rows and up to 5 columns as a sum of equal addends.
REPRODUCE, EXTEND, CREATE, AND DESCRIBE PATTERNS AND SEQUENCES USING A VARIETY OF MATERIALS.
EXPLAIN THAT THE THREE DIGITS OF A THREE-DIGIT NUMBER REPRESENT AMOUNTS OF HUNDREDS, TENS, AND ONES.
- 2.6.a Explain the following three-digit numbers as special cases: 100 can be thought of as a bundle of ten tens, called a “hundred,” and the numbers 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900 refer to one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, or nine hundreds (and 0 tens and 0 ones).