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Summer School Curriculum (Incoming 2nd Graders)

Rated 4.78 out of 5, based on 74 reviews
4.8 (74 ratings)
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Buckmastery
376 Followers
Grade Levels
1st - 3rd, Homeschool
Subjects
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
Pages
135 pages
$15.00
$15.00
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Buckmastery
376 Followers

What educators are saying

This was great for my incoming second grader who struggled a little in first grade. Very engaging and easy to follow. It was set for the amount of days I wanted her to do work and weeks but was easily able to adjust as things came up or we had extra time.
This is a great summer school skill developer for building essential skills for school. It covers phonics, reading, writing, and math. Excellent choice for summer school.

Description

Leave lesson planning behind for summer school and pick up this full curriculum pack. I developed this for my own incoming 2nd grade students I have the privilege of teaching in summer school. After a finishing a year of teaching, it can be overwhelming to think about coming up with a full curriculum for summer, so I wanted to clean my curriculum up and offer it to you to make it easy and fun for you!

My summer school runs 3 days a week for four weeks, so this resource includes 12 full days of lessons and practice for phonics, reading, writing, and mathematics that help build upon what students learned in 1st grade and that help introduce and prepare them for concepts they'll be covering in 2nd grade.

This resource includes:

  • First Day of Summer School Set
  • Phonics Lessons
  • Flamingo Phonics (CVe)
  • Flying Bee Phonics (double vowel teams)
  • Fourth of July Phonics (diphthongs "ou" and "ow")
  • Fishy Phonics (r-controlled vowels)
  • Reading Lessons
  • Flamingo Find the Evidence
  • Beekeeper Key Details
  • Stars and Stripes Compare and Contrast
  • Anchors Away Answering Questions
  • Writing Lessons (Narrative, Informational, and Opinion Prompts that correspond with the reading topics for each)
  • Flamingo Writing
  • Bumble Bee Writing
  • Red, Writing, Blue
  • Writing Waves
  • Math Lessons
  • Even & Odd Numbers and Arrays
  • Honey Bee Skip Counting (by 2s, 3s, 5s, 10s, 100s, and 1,000s)
  • Heroes’ Hundred Chart (Place Value and Adding/Subtracting on Hundred Chart)
  • Mast Math Models (Make a 10 and Adding/Subtracting double digits without Regrouping)
  • Review/Practice Games & Activities (Just 2 for now but more to come)
  • Pineapple Practice Arrays
  • Historic Heroes Hundred Chart Game

I hope that this resource can be helpful to you and your students! Happy summer!

Teaching summer school but this resource not quite what you need? Check out this resource to start summer school out right:

First Day of Summer School Set

Trying to keep that tropical theme going? Check out these resources:

First Day of School Activity Set

Tropical Clock Labels (Pineapple/Flamingo)

Reader Tracker + Goal Chart (Tropical/Pineapple/Flamingo)

Find me on Instagram and Pinterest!

Instagram: @Buckmastery Pinterest: Buckmastery

Total Pages
135 pages
Answer Key
N/A
Teaching Duration
N/A
Last updated May 27th, 2020
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Understand that the three digits of a three-digit number represent amounts of hundreds, tens, and ones; e.g., 706 equals 7 hundreds, 0 tens, and 6 ones. Understand the following as special cases:
Count within 1000; skip-count by 5s, 10s, and 100s.
Fluently add and subtract within 100 using strategies based on place value, properties of operations, and/or the relationship between addition and subtraction.
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. Understand 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 10 or 100 to a given number 100–900, and mentally subtract 10 or 100 from a given number 100–900.

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