2nd Grade
Unit 2 Module A: Making Decisions
October: 1st Trimester
2nd Grade
Unit 2 Module A: Making Decisions
October: 1st Trimester
Module Overview
Use the drop down menu to view the new resources have been curated to support ReadyGEN reading and writing and the foundational skills block
eBackpacks Unit 2 - digital books, articles, etc. for student reading to encourage a love of reading and build background knowledge around unit topics and themes
PBA Student Writing Samples for Unit 2A - Samples & reflective questions to use with students to support their PBA writing and scoring support for teacher use
Fundations Videos - Exemplar videos in the Edthena Video Bank to watch Fundations lessons
Fundations Learning Activities Overview & Video Examples - An at-a-glance support for the Learning Activities used in Fundations
Readers understand that knowing the structure of a story helps them comprehend the text.
Writers understand that describing a character’s actions, thoughts, and feelings enhances a story.
Learners understand that people make decisions based on their needs and wants.
How do readers identify the beginning, middle, and end of a story?
How do writers use details about a character’s actions, thoughts, and feelings to make stories more interesting?
Readers will describe the structure of a story by identifying its beginning, middle, and end.
Writers will compose a narrative with details that describe characters’ actions, thoughts, and feelings.
Learners will identify ways in which people make decisions based on their needs and wants.
Narrative Task: Write about a Decision
Children will write a short narrative about a character who makes a decision about money. They will create a plot with a beginning, middle, and end.
Standards Addressed
The highlighted evidence outcomes are the priority for all students, serving as the essential concepts and skills. It is recommended that the remaining evidence outcomes listed be addressed as time allows, representing the full breadth of the curriculum.
Evidence outcomes in bold are those that are expected to be mastered in trimester 1
Follow agreed-upon rules for discussions (for example: gaining the floor in respectful ways, listening to others with care, speaking one at a time about the topics and texts under discussion). (CCSS: SL.2.1a)
Ask for clarification and further explanation as needed about the topic and texts under discussion. (CCSS: SL.2.1c)
Contribute knowledge to a small group or class discussion to develop a topic.
Evidence outcomes in bold are those that are expected to be mastered in trimester 1
Prioritized Evidence Outcomes:
Describe how characters in a story respond to major events and challenges. (CCSS: RL.2.3)*
Describe the overall structure of a story, including describing how the beginning introduces the story and the ending concludes the action. (CCSS: RL.2.5) *
Supporting Evidence Outcomes:
Ask and answer such questions as who, what, where, when, why, and how to demonstrate understanding of key details in a text. (CCSS: RL.2.1)
Recount stories, including fables and folktales from diverse cultures, and determine their central message, lesson, or moral. (CCSS: RL.2.2)
Describe how words and phrases (for example: regular beats, alliteration, rhymes, repeated lines) supply rhythm and meaning in a story, poem, or song. (CCSS: RL.2.4)
Acknowledge differences in the points of view of characters, including by speaking in a different voice for each character when reading dialogue aloud. (CCSS: RL.2.6)
Use information gained from the illustrations and words in a print or digital text to demonstrate understanding of its characters, setting or plot. (CCSS: RL.2.7)
Foundational Skills:
Distinguish long and short vowels when reading regularly spelled one- syllable words. (CCSS: RF.2.3a) *
Identify real-life connections between words and their use (for example: describe foods that are spicy or juicy). (CCSS: L.2.5a)
Know spelling-sound correspondences for additional common vowel teams. (CCSS: RF.2.3b) *
Read multisyllabic words accurately and fluently.*
Decode words with common prefixes and suffixes. (CCSS: RF.2.3d) *
Identify words with inconsistent but common spelling-sound correspondences. (CCSS: RF.2.3e) *
Read grade-appropriate irregularly spelled words. (adapted from CCSS: RF.2.3f) *
Read grade-level text with purpose and understanding. (CCSS: RF.2.4a)
Read grade-level text orally with accuracy, appropriate rate, and expression. (CCSS: RF.2.4b)
Read grade-level text accurately and fluently, attending to phrasing, intonation, and punctuation. *
Determine the meaning of the new word formed when a known prefix is added to a known word (for example: happy/unhappy, tell/retell). (CCSS: L.2.4b) *
Use a known root word as a clue to the meaning of an unknown word with the same root (for example: addition, additional). (CCSS: L.2.4c) *
Use knowledge of the meaning of individual words to predict the meaning of compound words (for example: birdhouse, lighthouse,housefly; bookshelf, notebook, bookmark). (CCSS: L.2.4d) *
Create new words by combining base words with affixes to connect known words to new words. *
Determine which strategies should be used to decode multisyllabic words.
Evidence outcomes in bold are those that are expected to be mastered in trimester 1
Prioritized Evidence Outcome:
Write real or imagined narratives that describe events in sequence and provide a sense of closure (CCSS:W.2.3)
Supporting Evidence Outcomes:
Include details to describe actions, thoughts, and feelings (CCSS:W.2.3)
Use temporal words to signal event order. (CCSS:W.2.3)
Provide a sense of closure. (CCSS:W.2.3)
Write simple, descriptive poems.
Write with precise nouns, active verbs, and descriptive adjectives.
Apply knowledge about structure and craft gained from mentor text to narrative writing.
Develop characters both internally (thoughts and feelings) and externally (physical features, expressions, clothing)
Grammar & Conventions:
Use collective nouns (for example: group).
Form and use the past tense of frequently occurring irregular verbs (for example:sat, hid, told).
Capitalize holidays, product names, and geographic names.
Use commas in greetings and closings of letters.
With guidance and support from adults and peers, focus on a topic and strengthen writing as needed by revising and editing.
Assessments
Assessments listed below reflect a balance of both formative and summative options, providing teachers and students with information relative to mastery of module and unit goals in reading and writing.
Student Prompt:
Think about the characters in the texts you read and the decisions they made. Write your own story about a character who makes a decision about money.
Include a beginning, middle, and end.
Include at least two events that happen.
Use words such as first, next, then, and in the end to tell the order of the events.
Add details about the thoughts and feelings of the character.
Include a sentence that wraps up your story.
*Administered AFTER Module 2B
Texts
Texts listed below reflect the full series of reading materials designed to build background knowledge within the Unit theme.
Anchor Text:
Alexander Who Used to Be Rich Last Sunday (trade book)
Lexile AD570L
Literary Text
Supporting Text:
A Chair for My Mother (Text Collection V1)
Lexile 640L
Literary Text
Sleuth:
“I’ll Trade You!” (610L)
“More Than Cash Dispensers” (720L)
Foundational Skills