Skills available for Oregon
second-grade
math standards
Standards are in
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and IXL math skills are in blue. Hold your
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Click on the name of a skill to practice that skill.
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2.1
Number and Operations
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2.1.1
Write, compare, and order whole numbers to 1000.
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2.1.2
Understand and apply base-ten numeration, and count in multiples of one, two, five, ten, and one hundred.
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2.1.3
Compose and decompose whole numbers less than one thousand by place value (e.g., 426 as 4 hundreds + 2 tens + 6 ones and 400 + 20 + 6).
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2.1.4
Use place value and properties of operations to find and use equivalent representations of numbers (such as 35 represented by 35 ones, 3 tens and 5 ones, or 2 tens and 15 ones).
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2.2
Number and Operations and Algebra
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2.2.1
Apply, with fluency, sums to 20 and related subtraction facts.
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2.2.2
Solve multi-digit whole number problems by applying various meanings (e.g., taking away, and comparing) and models (e.g., combining or separating sets, using number lines, and hundreds charts) of addition and subtraction.
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2.2.3
Develop fluency with efficient procedures for adding and subtracting multi-digit whole numbers and understand why the procedures work on the basis of place value and number properties.
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2.2.4
Select and apply efficient methods to estimate sums and differences or calculate them mentally depending on the numbers and context involved.
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2.2.5
Determine the value of mixed collections of coins to $1.00.
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2.3
Measurement
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2.3.1
Determine length by finding the total number of equal-length units that are placed end-to-end without gaps or overlaps.
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2.3.2
Apply concepts of partitioning (the mental activity of slicing the length of an object into equal-sized units) and transitivity (e.g., if object A is longer than object B and object B is longer than object C, then object A is longer than object C).
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2.3.3
Demonstrate an understanding that using different measurement units will result in different numerical measurements for the same object.
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2.3.4
Explain the need for equal length units and the use of standard units of measure.
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2.3.5
Use rulers and other measurement tools to estimate and measure length in common units (e.g., centimeter and inch).
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2.3.6
Use the measurement process: choose an appropriate measurement unit, compare that unit to the object, and report the number of units.
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2.3.7
Demonstrate an understanding of time and use of time relationships (e.g., how many minutes in an hour, days in a week, and months in a year).
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2.3.8
Tell time in increments of five minutes using analog and digital clocks.
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