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Description of Second Grade Courses
Art
  • draws based on experiences, fantasy, stories, poems, and songs selected from diverse cultures
  • paints designs and story content pictures using thinner brushes, creating a variety of shapes
  • models with clay more proficiently
  • creates free-standing three-dimensional designs with paper
  • uses the brush stroke to make letters
  • develops skill in printmaking by rubbing and stamping
  • makes more detailed puppets that reflect a variety of cultures using simple household materials
  • constructs with wood objects from the real and imaginary world

Communication Arts and Reading
  • listens and responds to others with interest and enjoyment
  • retells a story in the proper sequence and with expression
  • shares thoughts and ideas through announcements, invitations, statements, drama, individual, and committee reports
  • follows a series of oral directions
  • listens to messages and deliver them accurately
  • begins to gain understanding of him or herself and of basic human values through reading and listening to stories from other cultures
  • enjoys reading for pleasure and information
  • uses imagination and original ideas in re-telling stories
  • knows the difference between fiction and non-fiction
  • identifies different literary forms such as stories, folk tales, biographies, plays, poetry, and fables
  • recalls the events of a story in full detail and proper order
  • identifies how a character's actions cause certain results
  • predicts what is going to happen at the end of a story from what happens at the beginning; checks the prediction after reading the story
  • reads for specific information
  • uses word structure in comprehension (s or es makes a word plural; ed indicates past tense; er or est compares, etc.)
  • recognizes that an apostrophe shows possession or contraction
  • demonstrates understanding that words may have many meanings
  • uses may strategies to find meaning of unfamiliar words (e.g., sound, word structure, prefixes, and the meaning of the sentence)
  • writes for different purposes and audiences (personal journals, newsletters, stories, lists, invitations, poems, etc.)
  • puts sentences together to make short paragraphs
  • begins sentences with capital letter; ends each with a period, question mark, or exclamation point; and uses quotation marks
  • spells words most frequently used in student writing and reading while continuing to use invented spelling when needed
  • begins to write in script

Health and Physical Education
  • explores general and personal space
  • distinguishes between opposites such as inside/outside, around/through, over/under, and front/back
  • balances on a low beam
  • catches and throws with two hands
  • moves and stops smoothly
  • knows the difference between even and uneven rhythms in movement
  • takes part in physical fitness activities such as aerobic walking for a healthy heart and good circulation, stretching for flexibility, and resistance work for strength 
    continues to develop listening and safety skills
  • knows the importance of good nutrition and avoiding addictive habits for a healthy lifestyle
  • develops self-esteem and respect for people of other cultural backgrounds
  • relates learning to other subject areas and daily family life
  • knows about germs and where they are found
  • understands proper nutrition is needed for tissue growth and repair
  • appreciates the eyes as delicate organs that need proper care
  • respects certain objects in the home, such as matches and electrical appliances, which require special care to ensure safety
  • understands that daily exercise such as rhythm games and dance are important for good health
  • demonstrates dances from many cultures

Mathematics
  • estimates and measures length using customary (foot, inch) and metric (meter, centimeter) units of measurements and measures of other cultures
  • estimates and measures weight using both customary (pound, ounce) and metric (kilogram, gram) units of measure as well as weights of other cultures
  • explains money value relationships among penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half-dollar, and dollar and compares these coins to money of other countries
  • explains calendar relationships: days, weeks, months, and years
  • reads time on a clock and measures elapsed time
  • reads Celsius and Fahrenheit thermometers, counts forward and backward by ones, twos, threes, fives and tens (up to 100)
  • counts numbers from zero through one thousand and explains their "place value" meaning
  • describes and continues simple number sequences
  • makes up and solves story problems involving fractions
  • translates "word problems" into mathematical sentences
  • explains the meaning of fractions, including fractions with numerators greater than one (e.g., 2/3, 4/5)
  • explains the meaning of "dozen" and "half-dozen"
  • explains the relationship between "addition" and "subtraction"
  • explains the meaning and relationship of "multiplication" and "division"
  • finds sums of pairs of numbers (each between 10 and 1,000)
  • matches objects in one-to-one and two-to-one correspondence
  • multiplies whole numbers up to 5x5
  • identifies geometric shapes (rectangles, squares, triangles, circles in the environment)
  • recognizes mirror symmetry
  • investigates probability experiments (flipping a coin and guessing the odds of its landing on heads or tails, etc.)

Science
  • learns to read a thermometer, measure objects, uses a balance
  • measures and explains length, area and volume
  • identifies the physical characteristics common to most plants
  • describes the general growth and development of several common plants
  • identifies the characteristics common to most plants
  • describes the general growth and development of several common plants
  • identifies characteristics of all living things
  • compares various animals
  • matches certain animals and plants with the environment that suits their needs
  • observes and describes the behavior of water
  • observes and explains objects floating or sinking
  • conducts experiments with magnets
  • observes and describes how water, wind, and sun affect our environment
  • studies the physical relationship between the sun and the earth
  • reviews biographies of scientists from various cultures
  • learns how different cultures impact the environment

Social Studies
  • understands how people from diverse cultural groups live and work in and around New York City
  • identifies the cultural diversity of New York City
  • understands and appreciates the diversity of cultures represented in the school and local community
  • understands that family structures vary and that all families deserve respect
  • understands that New York City and Long Island are made up of urban, suburban, and rural communities
  • understands how people live and work in other urban, suburban and rural communities in the United States
  • understands that people living in the United States communities have come from all over the world
  • understands how people are brought closer together through group communication and common goals
  • understands how communities observe special days and customs
  • understands how current affairs affect his or her life
  • recognizes the factors which influence community development and change
  • develops certain work study skills, such as making reports from information found in books, newspapers, television, magazines, and through interviews

Computer Education
  • describes computers as tools
  • identifies different uses of computers
  • cares for computer hardware
  • identifies and explains the disk drive
  • uses a disk drive properly
  • uses appropriate software to reinforce learning in subject areas, and develop basic. problem-exploration, and critical-thinking skills
  • handles diskettes properly
  • loads programs from diskettes properly
  • uses a simple word processing program to develop language and writing skills 
    develops skills of logic and ordering by learning a simple programming language (e.g., Logo, BASIC)
  • creates original designs in Logo
  • uses repeat commands in Logo

Library Skills
  • continues to review the library skills already learned
  • learns the meaning of "publisher", "spine", "jacket", "author" when used in the Library Media Center or School Library
  • learns how to locate books by markings found on the spine and on the title page
  • identifies the main idea in books, filmstrips, recordings, and other media
  • prepares oral and written book reports for sharing, reading, listening, and viewing experiences
  • uses reference materials to locate information
  • recognizes and enjoys the works of illustrators
 

Newsflash

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Vacancies

Job opportunities at Al-Ihsan Academy!
Al-Ihsan Academy is looking for Bus Drivers and Teachers of Arabic, Quran, Islamic Studies and all Academic Subjects.