SKU: 31110651607
math task cards 2nd grade

math task cards 2nd grade 2nd Grade Math Task Cards

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Description

math task cards 2nd grade 2nd Grade Math Task Cards2nd Grade Math Task Cards, Centers, Games MEGA BUNDLE Are you tired of scrambling to find engaging math activities for your 2nd grade class every day? Do your students struggle to stay focused during independent math activities? Imagine having a complete set of math activities that students genuinely love. These 2nd Grade Math Task Cards offer a diverse range of engaging, self checking activities Each task card set targets a specific 2nd grade math

2nd Grade Math Task Cards, Centers, Games MEGA BUNDLE

Are you tired of scrambling to find engaging math activities for your 2nd-grade class every day? Do your students struggle to stay focused during independent math activities?

Imagine having a complete set of math activities that students genuinely love. These 2nd Grade Math Task Cards offer a diverse range of engaging, self-checking activities

Each task card set targets a specific 2nd-grade math standard. Whether your students need reinforcement, differentiation, or independent challenges, these task cards provide exactly what you're looking for.

Get it on TPT

Why You’ll Love This Bundle

  • Highly engaging - students love them!
  • Low-prep - just print, laminate & cut
  • Perfect for math centers & stations
  • Great for independent practice
  • Self-checking for student independence
  • Covers all key 2nd grade math skills
  • Ideal for differentiation & intervention
  • Easily organized in photo storage boxes
  • Use all year long!
  • Bright, kid-friendly graphics
CLASSROOM-TESTED BY OVER 17,000 TEACHERS

Read what real teachers have said: 

      • Emily T.  said, “Wow! These have been so helpful! I have these laminated and use them as independent work opportunities. These have been incredible for building, practicing, and reviewing skills that they might need some extra attention in. I am able to watch my student's improve after using these. Such a great resource!
      • Alexandra C. saidMath games are an engaging and effective way to reinforce key math skills while keeping students motivated and excited to learn. They offer valuable practice in a fun, interactive format, and can be especially helpful for differentiating instruction and supporting various learning styles

      • Abbey B. said, I put these task cards around the room and it has become my student's favorite math station.

Units Included

  • Numbers to 1000: Identifying place value, counting and skip counting by 5s, 10s, and 100s, comparing numbers, writing numbers in word and expanded forms, and using visual aids to support number sense.
  • 2-Digit & 3-Digit Addition and Subtraction: Practicing addition and subtraction within 100 and 1000 using place value, regrouping, mental math strategies, solving word problems, and identifying missing numbers and inequalities.
  • Money: Skip counting coins, two-digit addition and subtraction, comparing amounts, mental math with base ten, and applying addition/subtraction strategies to solve money word problems.
  • Time: Reading and writing time on analog and digital clocks, drawing clock hands, and distinguishing between A.M. and P.M.
  • Measurement: Measuring objects using rulers and other tools, estimating and comparing lengths, and solving measurement word problems.
  • Data & Graphing: Creating and interpreting line plots, pictographs, and bar graphs, and solving problems using data from graphs.
  • Geometry: Identifying attributes of 2-D and 3-D shapes, drawing shapes, partitioning rectangles and circles into equal shares, and recognizing halves, thirds, and fourths.
    • Multiplication: Determining even and odd numbers, using skip counting and repeated addition, solving array problems, and writing equations for equal groups.

    What's Included

    • 9 Units, 64 Easy to organize centers (Color and Black and White)
    • Recording Sheet
    • Task Card Organizer Covers
    • Task Card Boxes Covers (PDF and Editable PowerPoint)
    • Printing and Setup Guide 

    Don’t let your students miss out on fun, interactive math games and activities.

    Grab this CCSS-Aligned 2nd Grade Math Task Card Bundle now and watch your learners thrive as they build strong foundational skills.

    Get started today and make your math lessons more engaging than ever!

    Disclaimer: This is a digital product that will be delivered via email. You will not be receiving anything in the mail. 

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    SKU: 31110651607

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    4.7 ★★★★★
    Based on 19 reviews
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    Verified Purchase
    Kyle Henderson
    San Leandro, US
    ★★★★★ 5
    A must-read for anyone interested in communication studies, rhetoric, American public debates
    Format: Paperback
    In this seminal book, Fisher expounds his "narrative paradigm," a sweeping theory of human communication and more. Professor Emeritus at USC's Annenberg School of Communication, Fisher's discipline was rhetoric. But the book's subtitle -- "Toward a Philosophy of Reason, Value, and Action" -- isn't a stretch. Fisher's theory is a grand project extending its purview way beyond the communication department's door. At root is Fisher's rejection of what he calls the "rational world paradigm," which falsely separates logos from mythos, reason from imagination, fact from value. Doesn't work that way, Fisher says. No such thing as a value-free belief, assertion, or action. Instead, we evaluate according to a "logic of good reasons" -- reasons we value as good -- rooted in the narratives of our experience. An under-appreciated aspect of Fisher's work is the application of his theory to American politics. America's most enduring narrative is The American Dream. But that dream comprises two sub-narrative strands: the "materialistic myth" and the "moralistic myth." These two strands broadly represent conservative and progressive impulses respectively, but those threadbare categories don't do Fisher's explication justice. The two myths find their roots in the narratives of the earliest Americans, and have been battling it out ever since. It's a credible understanding of the history of American public moral debates.
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    Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2010
    M
    Verified Purchase
    Michael Kleeberg
    Houston, US
    ★★★★★ 4
    Insider's Book
    Format: Paperback
    Wlater R. Fisher is an expert in his field. His grasp of classical theory is daunting. Human Communication as Narrative explains his new theory well. However, it IS an insider's book, intended for scholars. I have a master's degree in rhetoric and composition, and my progress through it was slow--however, this was more attributable to my having stopped at an MA than it was to Fisher. I found his theory exhaustively researched, skillfully and thoughfully developed, and eminently applicable to the practice of contemporary rhetorical study. I would regard this book as a must-have for any serious student of rhetoric.
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    Reviewed in the United States on April 22, 2011
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    PWL
    Lexington, US
    ★★★★★ 5
    Not only will this give you a great overview/introduction, but Fisher is a good writer as ...
    Format: Paperback
    I'm a fan of the Narrative Paradigm, and this is the seminal work on that. Not only will this give you a great overview/introduction, but Fisher is a good writer as well. Very clear, succinct, and engaging.
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    Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2016
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    Hugh of Skokie
    Draper, US
    ★★★★★ 5
    The Dark Roots of Liberalism
    Format: Hardcover
    Italian philosopher/intellectual history Domenico Losurdo's study of the origins of liberalism is a tour de force of thorough scholarship and rigorous critique. Losurdo seems to have read all of the collected works of all of the significant thinkers in the liberal tradition, from Locke to de Tocqueville and beyond, and has created a coherent and compelling narrative of their themes and variations, as well as their rhetorical tropes and myriad contradictions. Classical liberalism, as here presented, is an attempt to translate the world, in all its richness and mystery, into property, and to transform property into the fullest expression of both nature and nature's God. It involves fetishizing "liberty" and disdaining equality, which is seen -- correctly -- as potentially compromising the God-given prerogatives of property holders. Losurdo's liberals divide the world into the "community of the free" -- always a minority -- and the servile majority. These masses do not deserve liberty or political participation because they perceive government as a way to address human suffering, and not simply as a bulwark protecting the divine rights of capital, i.e. the "private" realm. The classical liberal sees government as good to the extent that it has no social function at all -- because poverty and radical inequity are understood not as the outcome of human social and political arrangements, but as a reflection of immutable natural law and simple human frailty. Social Darwinist and eugenic motifs float through the Liberal symphony almost from the beginning, supplanting without really changing the earlier Protestant notion of predestination, but shifting the location of eternal reward or damnation to the marketplace and workplace. Thus liberalism sides against social emancipation, whether of slaves or peasants or factory laborers. The job of workers within a liberal commonwealth, as depicted by most of these thinkers, is to embrace their freedom to starve and cherish the institutions that oppress them in the sweet and holy name of Liberty. Slavery makes many of these thinkers uneasy, but it is not as profoundly disturbing to them as the prospect of central government tampering with the sacred rights of property holders by abolishing an institution that makes a mockery of any concept of human liberty. It is the radical thinkers of the French Revolution, and those influenced by them, who come out favorably here -- the ones who believe that the community must be seen as one body, and that freedom and dignity belong to all, without exception. Losurdo reminds us that it was not classical liberals who abolished slavery -- it was the Black Jacobins who brought the Rights of Man to the subjugated Africans of Haiti in history's only successful slave rebellion (at least since Moses). They were supported by the religiously inspired abolitionists, who saw slavery in moral rather than capitalist terms. Losurdo shows that liberalism took on the despotism of Church and Crown, only to create a harsher and colder absolutism of Money and Market, wrapped up in the rhetoric of Reason and tied with the ribbon of Freedom. And though classical liberalism has mutated over time and allowed the community of the free to expand somewhat, its fundamental biases remain in place, as witnessed in every ding-dong attack against "big government" or the "nanny state." Losurdo's "counter-history" of liberalism places these tediously reflexive political gambits in historical context, showing that they are rooted in a vision of the state as a kind of gated community, serving those within the threshold of privilege, suppressing those on the outside. At a time when political discourse centers on the percentages of the included and excluded, the worthy and the unworthy -- Occupy Wall Street's 1 percent and 99 percent, Mitt Romney's 47 percent (which was also his percentage of the vote) -- Losurdo's study is highly relevant and enlightening. It underscores the deep tensions between classical liberalism -- with its governance by and for the elite, and passive citizenship for the rest -- and the ideals of participatory and inclusive democracy, i.e., social democracy. It is an important book, and I recommend it to everyone with an interest in the history of political theory, and a desire to understand why our own political processes seem to take place in an abstract realm so cosmically distant from the reality of everyday life.
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    Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2012
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    Verified Purchase
    Malvin
    Lexington, US
    ★★★★★ 5
    A brilliant reassessment of Western intellectual history
    Format: Kindle
    "Liberalism: A Counter History" by Domenico Losurdo offers a brilliant reassessment of Western intellectual history. Dr. Losurdo is a leading Italian intellectual who has taught at university for many decades. Dr. Losurdo's book will interest readers desiring bold, thoughtful and compelling perspectives on U.S. and European history; with insights that may be very useful to us today. More than anything else, Dr. Losurdo's work articulates a highly original and powerful critique of the ideology of capitalist property relations. Diving into the writings of John Locke, Adam Smith, Bernard de Mandeville and other influential Enlightenment thinkers, Dr. Losurdo explains that the principle goal of liberalism (used here in the European sense of the word) was to secure the rights of property holders over the poor; without the meddlesome interference of church and monarchy. Readers who are accustomed to viewing U.S. history through rose-colored glasses will find their views severely challenged here. Dr. Losurdo persuasively argues that Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and other revolutionaries enthusiastically embraced liberal ideology in order to help institutionalize its brutal slave economy. Put another way, it seems that Independence was ultimately about the prerogatives of the elite class who comprised the "community of the free" to buy, sell and own slaves. Dr. Losurdo goes on to explain how Americans put philosophy into service to justify Anglo-Saxon racial superiority and the violent dispossession of native peoples' lands. Dr. Losurdo discusses how liberalism has influenced world history since the American Revolution. Through Dr. Losurdo's scholarship, we gain appreciation for the inherent tension that exists between liberalism's `emancipation' of the people who are privileged by virtue of their race and class; versus the `dis-emancipation' of the working class and poor who are comprised mostly of people of color. So, while liberals' greatest proponents have tended to use violence to lock in elite privilege (colonialism, the U.S. Civil War, the two World Wars), radicals have often struggled in the name of freedom for the people (the Haitian Revolution and the French Revolution). Importantly, Dr. Losurdo challenges us to rethink the idea that progress is a natural by-product of liberalism. It is probably more accurate to say that liberals would be content to have the people live in misery; and that freedoms have been gained by ordinary people through struggle and collective action. The importance of this insight cannot be overstated. By compelling us to think anew about the liberal legacy, we can more easily detect the liberal apologists who pander for the one percent; while empowering the 99 percent of us to speak truth to power. I highly recommend this outstanding book to everyone.
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    Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2014

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