Kindergarten through fifth grade: What your child should know
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By the end of second grade, you can expect your child to:
- Begin to reason and concentrate
- Improve his ability to process information
- Work cooperatively with a partner or small group
- Understand the difference between right and wrong
- Make connections between concepts so he will be better able to compare and contrast ideas
- Expand his vocabulary
- Read fluently with expression
- Recognize most irregularly spelled words such as because and upon
- Begin to use a dictionary
- Add single- and multi-digit numbers with regrouping
- Tell time to the quarter-hour
- Know the concept of multiplication (for example, 2 x 3 is two rows of three)
Find out more about your second-grader and reading, writing, language arts, math, science, technology, social studies, art, music, and physical education.
By the end of third grade, you can expect your child to:
- Work cooperatively and productively with other children in small groups to complete projects
- Understand how choices affect consequences
- Become more organized and logical in her thinking processes
- Build stronger friendships
- Be helpful, cheerful, and pleasant as well as rude, bossy, selfish, and impatient
- Be more influenced by peer pressure because friends are very important at this stage
- Like immediate rewards for behavior
- Be able to copy from a chalkboard
- Be able to write neatly in cursive because the small muscles of the hand have developed
- Read longer stories and chapter books with expression and comprehension
- Use prefixes, suffixes, and root words and other strategies to identify unfamiliar words
- Multiply single- and multi-digit numbers
- Divide multi-digit numbers by one-digit numbers
- Tell time to the half-hour and quarter-hour and to five minutes and one minute
Find out more about your third-grader and reading, writing, language arts, math, science, technology, social studies, art, music, and physical education.

