English/Language Arts - Second Grade: Accomplishments
Reading
Accomplishments:
- 2.1.01 Develop oral language.
- Show evidence of expanding oral language through vocabulary growth.
- Continue to implement rules for conversation.
- Understand, follow, and give oral directions.
- Participate in group discussion.
- Participate in creative responses to text (e.g., choral reading, discussion, and dramatization).
- Respond to questions from teachers and other group members.
- Narrate a personal story.
- Summarize lesson content.
- 2.1.02 Develop listening skills.
- Listen attentively to speaker for specific information.
- Use appropriate listening skills (e.g., does not interrupt, faces speaker, asks questions).
- Listens and responds to a variety of media (e.g., books, audio tapes, videos).
- Recognize the difference between formal and informal languages.
- Follow oral directions.
- 2.1.03 Demonstrate knowledge of concepts of print.
- Read and explain own writings.
- Recognize that groups of sentences make a paragraph and paragraphs make a story.
- Recognize and use parts of a book (e.g., title, author, illustrator, table of contents and glossary).
- Understand punctuation (e.g., period, question mark, exclamation mark).
- 2.1.04 Develop and maintain phonemic awareness.
- Develop awareness of sounds of language through repeated exposure to a variety of auditory experiences (e.g., poetry, books on tape, music lyrics, sound effects, and read-alouds).
- Add, delete, and change targeted sounds to modify or change words.
- Identify and produce rhyming words.
- 2.1.05 Develop and use decoding strategies.
- Use knowledge of letter-sound correspondence and structural analysis to decode words.
- Use decoding strategies, such as sounding out words, comparing similar words, breaking words into smaller words, and looking for word parts (e.g., compound words, word families, blends, and digraphs).
- Use known words to decode unknown words.
- Apply knowledge of basic syllabication rules.
- 2.1.06 Read to develop fluency, expression, accuracy and confidence.
- Read orally to develop fluency, expression, accuracy, and confidence.
- Reflect punctuation within written text while reading orally.
- Participate in guided, oral readings.
- Demonstrate the automatic recognition of high frequency words.
- Read a variety of texts with fluency, expression, accuracy and confidence.
- Read independently daily.
- 2.1.07 Develop and extend reading vocabulary.
- Build vocabulary by listening to literature, participating in discussions, and reading self-selected and assigned texts.
- Recognize common abbreviations and contractions.
- Participate in shared reading.
- Manipulate word families, word wall and word sorts.
- Match oral words to print words.
- Determine the meaning of unfamiliar words (e.g., picture dictionary, picture clues, context clues and structural analysis).
- Add endings to base words to make new words (e.g., -ed, -ing, and -es).
- Identify simple multiple-meaning words based on the appropriate meaning for the context.
- Build vocabulary through frequent read-alouds.
- 2.1.08 Develop and use pre-reading strategies.
- Identify a purpose for reading.
- Participate in activities to build background knowledge to make meaning from text.
- Make predictions about text.
- Use illustrations to preview text.
- Create graphic organizers (e.g., KWL, webs, lists, story maps, charts).
- Connect life experience to information and events in texts.
- 2.1.09 Use active comprehension strategies to derive meaning while reading and check for understanding after reading.
- Derive meaning while reading
- employing self-correction strategies (e.g., rereading, asking for help).
- participating in discussion about text and relating selection to personal experience.
- predicting and adjusting outcomes during reading.
- Check for understanding after reading by
- recalling the sequence of events in a story.
- drawing conclusions based on evidence gained while reading.
- restating story events in order to clarify and organize ideas.
- recognizing cause and effect.
- recognizing the main idea in picture books and texts.
- 2.1.10 Introduce informational skills to facilitate learning.
- Recognize outside resources (e.g., family and community).
- Recognize a variety of print sources (e.g., books, magazines, maps, charts, and graphs).
- Understand the purpose of various reference materials (e.g., dictionary, encyclopedia).
- Use graphic organizers to aid in understanding material from informational texts.
- Visit libraries and checks out appropriate materials.
- 2.1.11 Develop skills to facilitate reading to learn in a variety of content areas.
- Develop content specific vocabulary.
- Use text features to locate information (e.g., charts, maps and illustrations).
- 2.1.12 Read independently for a variety of purposes.
- Read for literary experience.
- Read to gain information.
- Read to perform a task.
- Read for enjoyment.
- Read to expand vocabulary.
- Read to build fluency.
- 2.1.13 Experience various literary and media genres.
- Read and view various literary (e.g., picture books, storybooks, fairy tales, nonfiction texts, poetry, lyrics to songs) and media (e.g., illustrations, the arts, films, videos) genres.
- Understand the main idea in a visual message (e.g., pictures, cartoons, posters).
- Explore folktales and fables.
- Identify characters, plot, and setting in print and non-print text.
- Recognize how the main character and other characters interact with each other.
- Identify types of stories (e.g., folktales, fables, fairy tales).
- Determine whether the events in the reading selection are real or fantasy.
- Compare and contrast different stories.
- Determine the problem in a story and discover its solution.
- 2.1.14 Develop and maintain a motivation to read.
- Visit libraries/media centers and regularly check out materials.
- Share storybooks, poems, environmental print, and own writing.
- Explore a wide variety of literature through read alouds, tapes, and independent reading.
- Identify favorite stories, informational text, authors and illustrators.
- Engage in a variety of literacy activities voluntarily (e.g., self-select books and stories).
- Relate literary experiences to others (e.g., book reports, sharing favorite stories).
- Experience daily opportunities to read.
- Choose to read as a leisure activity.
Writing
Accomplishments:
- 2.2.01 Use a variety of pre-writing strategies.
- Brainstorm ideas with teachers and peers.
- Write key thoughts and questions, record reactions and observations.
- Construct graphic organizers to establish understanding.
- Select a focus for writing.
- Use a variety of sources to gather information.
- 2.2.02 Write for a variety of purposes.
- Write to acquire and exhibit knowledge (e.g., sentences, answers to questions).
- Write to entertain (e.g., stories, poems, riddles).
- Write to inform (e.g., friendly letters, two or three step directions, journals).
- 2.2.03. Show evidence of drafting and revision with written work.
- Compose first drafts using appropriate parts of the writing process.
- Write in complete coherent sentences.
- Uses temporary spelling to spell independently as necessary.
- Arrange events in logical and sequential order.
- Reread draft.
- Sharpen the selected focus for writing.
- Revise to clarify and refine writing (e.g., rearrange words, sentences, paragraphs) and provide more descriptive detail.
- Incorporate suggestions from peers and teachers.
- 2.2.04 Include editing before the completion of finished work.
- Apply elements of language (e.g., end marks, capitalization, and commas in a series).
- Edit for complete sentences.
- Use knowledge of letter sounds, word parts, word segmentation, and syllabication to monitor and correct spelling.
- Use classroom resources (e.g., word walls, picture dictionaries, teacher, peers, appropriate technology, student generated word books) to aid in proofreading.
- Identify words or phrases that could be added to clarify meaning of written stories.
- 2.2.05 Evaluate own and others' writing.
- Use a simple rubric to evaluate own writing and group work.
- Evaluate own and others' writing through small group discussion and shared work.
- Review personal collection to determine progress.
- 2.2.06 Experience numerous publishing opportunities.
- Prepare a variety of written work (e.g., published books, stories and book reports).
- Incorporate photographs or illustrations in written works.
- Use technology to publish writing.
- Share completed work.
- Create individual and classroom books.
- 2.2.07 Write narrative accounts.
- Write a narrative having a beginning, middle and ending.
- Write accounts of personal experiences.
- Write group stories with a beginning, middle, and end.
- Create readable documents with legible handwriting.
- 2.2.08 Write frequently across content areas.
- Summarize concepts presented in science (e.g., illustrations, sentences, paragraphs).
- Write stories about concepts presented in social studies.
- Write in math journals, create math stories, and write explanations for problem solving.
- Participate in shared writings about the arts and personal activities.
- 2.2.09 Write expressively using original ideas, reflections, and observations.
- Write stories and poems.
- Write, when given time, place, and materials.
- Write to express opinions and judgments.
- Continue to maintain, with teacher assistance, samples of writing and drawings that express opinions and judgements (e.g., portfolio, journals, student-made books).
- Dictate or write stories (e.g., tape recorder, adult, older student).
- 2.2.10 Write in response to literature.
- Describe setting, characters, and events in detail.
- Write a different ending to a story.
- Write about a favorite character or favorite part of a story.
- Compose a note or questions for a favorite author.
- Summarize a story.
- 2.2.11 Write in a variety of modes and genres.
- Write friendly notes, invitations, and messages.
- Write stories with a logical sequence.
- Write poems.
- Write descriptive sentences.
- Write a report.
- Write in journals.
Elements of Language
Accomplishments:
- 2.3.01 Demonstrate knowledge of standard English usage.
- Use nouns appropriately (e.g., singular and plural, common and proper, possessives).
- Use verbs appropriately (e.g., past and present tense, agreement, action and linking, irregular).
- Use pronouns appropriately (e.g., pronoun case, subject and object agreement).
- Use adjectives appropriately (e.g., descriptive, comparative, superlative).
- 2.3.02 Demonstrate knowledge of standard English mechanics.
- Capitalize the first word of a sentence, names, pronoun "I," and proper nouns.
- Use correct punctuation at the end of declarative sentences, exclamatory sentences and questions.
- Use commas correctly in a series of one- word items (e.g., apples, oranges, and pears).
- Form contractions using apostrophes.
- Write legibly in manuscript.
- 2.2.03 Demonstrate knowledge of standard English spelling.
- Spell high-frequency words correctly.
- Spell words correctly as appropriate to grade level.
- Spell basic short-vowel, long-vowel words and consonant blend patterns.
- Spell regular and irregular plurals correctly (e.g., boy/boys, child/children).
- Use a dictionary to spell words correctly and to verify spelling.
- Arrange words in alphabetical order to the second letter.
- 2.3.04 Demonstrate knowledge of correct sentence structure.
- Use appropriate language structure in oral and written communication (e.g., subject-verb agreement, correct pronoun choice, and logical/appropriate correct word order).
- Distinguish between complete and incomplete sentences.
- Identify and use statements, questions, and exclamatory sentences in writing and speaking.
- Combine simple sentences into compound sentences.

