Skip to content

What does a student learn in ?

This is the year science gets organized. Students sort animals into groups like mammals, fish, and reptiles, and they follow living things through a full life cycle, from a tadpole to a frog or a seed to a tree. They test how pushes and pulls move objects, and watch patterns in the sun and moon. By spring, they can explain how an animal's body parts help it survive where it lives.

  • Animal groups
  • Life cycles
  • Habitats and adaptations
  • Solids liquids and gases
  • Pushes and pulls
  • Sun and moon patterns
  • Earth's resources
Source: Mississippi Mississippi College- & Career-Readiness Standards
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Sorting animals into groups

    Students start the year looking closely at animals. They notice which ones have backbones and which do not, and they group animals like mammals, fish, birds, reptiles, and amphibians by what they see on the outside.

  2. 2

    Life cycles and survival

    Students follow how trees and frogs change as they grow. They also look at how animals find food, hide from danger, and use body parts like webbed feet or spines to live in places like deserts, oceans, and woodlands.

  3. 3

    Solids, liquids, and motion

    Students sort everyday materials as solids, liquids, or gases and measure how long, heavy, or full things are. They push and pull objects to see what makes them speed up, slow down, or heat up from rubbing.

  4. 4

    Sun, moon, and Earth

    Students watch patterns in the sky, like when the sun rises and how the moon changes shape. They also look at rocks, soil, sand, and water around them and talk about how people use these and how soil washes away.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 2.
Life Science
  • Hierarchical Organization

    L.2.1

    Living things are sorted into groups based on shared traits, from broad categories like "animal" down to specific ones like "robin." Students learn that smaller groups share more features in common.

  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of the classification of animals…

    L.2.1A

    Students sort animals into groups by looking at physical traits like body coverings, number of legs, or whether they have a backbone. The goal is to see how animals that share features belong together.

  • Compare and sort groups of animals with backbones

    L.2.1A.1

    Students sort animals into two groups: those with a backbone (like fish, birds, and frogs) and those without one (like worms, insects, and jellyfish). They practice spotting what makes each group different.

  • Classify vertebrates

    L.2.1A.2

    Students sort animals with backbones into groups like mammals, fish, and birds by looking at physical features such as fur, scales, or feathers.

  • Compare and contrast physical characteristics that distinguish classes of…

    L.2.1A.3

    Students compare two groups of animals with backbones, such as reptiles and amphibians, and explain how they are alike and how they are different. Think scales versus wet skin, or hatching on land versus in water.

  • Construct a scientific argument for classifying vertebrates that have unusual…

    L.2.1A.4

    Students explain why a tricky animal, like a bat or dolphin, belongs in a specific group. They look past one odd trait and use several body features together to decide where the animal fits.

  • Reproduction and Heredity

    L.2.2

    Students learn how living things make more of their own kind and how traits like eye color or leaf shape get passed from parents to offspring.

  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of how living things change in form…

    L.2.2A

    Living things go through stages as they grow and change. Students learn how animals and plants look different at each stage of life, from birth or seed to adult.

  • Use observations through informational texts and other media to observe the…

    L.2.2A.1

    Students look at pictures, books, and videos to learn how a tree changes from seed to seedling to full-grown tree. They compare how trees like pines and oaks grow and change through each stage of life.

  • Construct explanations using first-hand observations or other media to describe…

    L.2.2A.2

    Students observe and describe how amphibians like frogs change as they grow, from egg to tadpole to adult. They record what they notice and share what they learned.

  • Ecology and Interdependence

    L.2.3

    Students learn how living things depend on each other and on their surroundings to survive. A plant needs sunlight and water; an animal needs food, shelter, and other living things nearby.

  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of the interdependence of living…

    L.2.3A

    Living things depend on each other and on their surroundings to survive. Students learn how animals, plants, and their habitat fit together, and what happens when one piece of that picture changes.

  • Evaluate and communicate findings from informational text or other media to…

    L.2.3A.1

    Animals react when their environment changes. Students read or watch media about real events like fires, pollution, or shifts in food supply, then explain how animals survive, move, or struggle in response.

  • Construct scientific arguments to explain how animals can make major changes

    L.2.3A.2

    Animals change the land around them. Students learn to explain big changes, like a beaver blocking a stream, and small ones, like ants piling up dirt, then share what they found.

  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of the interdependence of living…

    L.2.3B

    Living things depend on each other to survive. Students learn how plants, animals, and other organisms rely on one another for food, shelter, and other needs.

  • Evaluate and communicate findings from informational text or other media to…

    L.2.3B.1

    Students read or watch videos about animals in the wild, then explain how those animals interact. They compare which animals eat only plants, only other animals, or both, and identify which animals hunt and which get hunted.

  • Conduct an investigation to find evidence where plants and animals compete or…

    L.2.3B.2

    Students look for real examples of plants and animals fighting over food or space, or helping each other survive. Then they share what they found using a model or drawing.

  • Adaptations and Diversity

    L.2.4

    Students look at how animals and plants are built for the places they live. A cactus stores water; a duck has webbed feet. These physical traits help living things survive in their environment.

  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of the ways animals adapt to their…

    L.2.4A

    Animals have body parts and behaviors that help them survive where they live. Students learn why a duck has webbed feet, why a bear grows thick fur, and how those features connect to the animal's home.

  • Evaluate and communicate findings from informational text or other media to…

    L.2.4A.1

    Students look up how plants and animals are built to survive in places like deserts, rainforests, or frozen tundra, then explain what they found. A cactus has a waxy coating to hold water; a duck has webbed feet to swim.

  • Create a solution exemplified by animal adaptations to solve a human problem in…

    L.2.4A.2

    Students look at how an animal's body solves a problem, like how a snowshoe hare's wide feet keep it from sinking in snow, then use that idea to design and build a solution to a real human problem.

  • Hierarchical Organization

    L.3.1

    Students sort living things into groups within groups, the way a dog is an animal, which is a living thing. They learn that scientists use these nested categories to organize all life on Earth.

  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of internal and external structures…

    L.3.1A

    Plants and animals have parts inside and outside their bodies. Students learn how those parts help living things grow, stay alive, find food, and have offspring.

  • Examine evidence to communicate information that the internal and external…

    L.3.1A.1

    Animals have body parts on the inside (heart, lungs, bones) and outside (skin, ears, legs) that help them survive and grow. Students look at examples and explain what each part does.

  • Examine evidence to communicate information that the internal and external…

    L.3.1A.2

    Students look at real plants and explain how their parts help them survive. A thorn keeps animals away, a root pulls in water, a colored petal attracts insects for pollination.

  • Obtain and communicate examples of physical features or behaviors of…

    L.3.1A.3

    Animals have body features and behaviors that help them survive where they live. Students identify examples from both vertebrates (animals with backbones) and invertebrates, such as why some animals grow thick fur, hibernate through winter, or travel to warmer places when food runs out.

Physical Science
  • Organization of Matter and Chemical Interactions

    P.2.5

    Students learn that matter is made of smaller parts and that mixing or changing materials can create something new, like combining baking soda and vinegar to produce bubbles and fizz.

  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of the properties of matter

    P.2.5A

    Matter is anything you can touch, hold, or pour. Students learn to describe objects by their properties, like color, shape, texture, and whether something sinks or floats.

  • Conduct a structured investigation to collect, represent

    P.2.5A.1

    Students sort everyday materials like water, air, and rocks into solids, liquids, and gases. They record what they observe about each one, noting color, texture, and whether it dissolves in water.

  • Compare and measure the length of solid objects using technology and…

    P.2.5A.2

    Students measure and compare the lengths of solid objects using rulers or other tools, then share what they found. The focus is on using the right tool accurately and explaining the results.

  • Compare the weight of solid objects and the volume of liquid objects

    P.2.5A.3

    Students weigh solid objects and measure how much space liquids take up, then compare their results and explain what they found.

  • Construct scientific arguments to support claims that some changes to matter…

    P.2.5A.4

    Heating changes some materials in ways you can undo, like melting ice back to water, and some ways you can't, like burning wood. Students argue which kind of change happened and explain why using evidence.

  • Motions, Forces, and Energy

    P.2.6

    Students learn how things move, what makes them speed up or slow down, and where energy comes from and goes. Think pushing a toy car or dropping a ball.

  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of how the motion of objects is…

    P.2.6A

    Pushing, pulling, or rubbing against a surface can change how fast or which direction an object moves. Students learn what makes things speed up, slow down, or stop.

  • Conduct a structured investigation to collect, represent

    P.2.6A.1

    Students push and pull objects in different ways, then record what happens. They test how changing the force or direction moves something faster, slower, or along a different path.

  • Generate and answer questions about the relationship between

    P.2.6A.2

    Students ask and answer questions about friction: why rubbing surfaces slow a moving object down and why rubbing your hands together makes them warm.

  • Develop a plan to change the force

    P.2.6A.3

    Students plan and test ways to change how much friction acts on an object, like making a slide faster or slowing down a toy car. They follow basic engineering steps: describe the problem, build a solution, and improve it based on what they observe.

Earth and Space Science
  • Earth and the Universe

    E.2.8

    Students learn where Earth fits in the universe, from the ground beneath their feet to the moon, sun, and stars above.

  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of the appearance, movements

    E.2.8A

    Students learn what the sun, moon, and stars look like in the sky and how they move. They spot patterns, like why the moon seems to change shape each week or why the sun rises and sets at predictable times.

  • Recognize that there are many stars that can be observed in the night sky and…

    E.2.8A.1

    Stars fill the night sky, and the Sun is one of them. Students learn that the Sun looks bigger and brighter than other stars because it is much closer to Earth.

  • With teacher guidance, observe, describe

    E.2.8A.2

    Students watch how sunrise and sunset times shift across the seasons, then collect and record that data from online sources to explain the pattern they found.

  • Observe and compare the details in images of the moon and planets using the…

    E.2.8A.3

    Students look at photos and data of the moon and planets, then compare what they can see with the naked eye to what telescopes and spacecraft reveal up close.

  • With teacher support, gain an understanding that scientists are humans who use…

    E.2.8A.4

    Students read or watch videos about real scientists who studied space and learn what those scientists discovered. This shows that ordinary people, through careful looking and testing, figured out how planets move, what stars are made of, and what else might be out there.

  • Use informational text and other media to observe, describe and predict the…

    E.2.8A.5

    Students watch how the Sun and Moon move and change over time, then predict what comes next. They use books, videos, and photos to explain patterns like sunrise, sunset, and the Moon's changing shape in the sky.

  • Create a model that will demonstrate the observable pattern of motion of the…

    E.2.8A.6

    Students build a model (a moving flashlight, a ball on a stick, or something similar) to show how the Sun or Moon moves across the sky in a predictable pattern. They test their design, find what doesn't work, and fix it.

  • Earth's Resources

    E.2.10

    Students learn where everyday materials come from. They explore how water, soil, rocks, and air are natural resources people use to build, grow food, and stay alive.

  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of how humans use Earth's resources

    E.2.10A

    Students identify natural resources like water, soil, and wood, then explain how people use them in everyday life.

  • Use informational text, other media

    E.2.10A.1

    Students look closely at rocks, soil, sand, and water to compare how they look, feel, and behave. They use books, videos, and hands-on observation to figure out what makes each material different.

  • Conduct an investigation to identify and classify everyday objects that are…

    E.2.10A.2

    Students sort everyday objects, like a wooden chair or clay pot, into two groups: resources the Earth can regrow or refill over time, and resources that will eventually run out.

  • Use informational text and other media to summarize and communicate how Earth…

    E.2.10A.3

    Students learn how people use natural materials like soil, water, rocks, and sand to build things and grow food. They read and watch videos about these materials, then put what they learned into their own words.

  • Use informational text, other media

    E.2.10A.4

    Students study how moving water and wind carry soil away from one place and deposit it somewhere else. They read about it, watch examples, and go outside to observe what erosion looks like up close.

  • With teacher guidance, investigate possible solutions to prevent or repair soil…

    E.2.10A.5

    Students test simple ideas for stopping soil from washing or blowing away, like planting grass or adding rocks, then talk about what worked. A teacher helps guide the investigation.

Common Questions
  • What does the science year look like overall?

    Students study living things, matter and motion, and the sky and Earth. They sort animals into groups, watch life cycles, push and pull objects, and track the sun and moon. A lot of the work happens through hands-on investigations and talking about what they noticed.

  • How can families help at home with the animal classification work?

    On a walk or at the zoo, ask if an animal has a backbone, fur, feathers, scales, or smooth wet skin. Sorting animals into mammals, birds, fish, reptiles, and amphibians during everyday moments builds the same thinking used in class.

  • What should students know about pushes, pulls, and friction?

    Students learn that a harder push moves something farther, and that rubbing surfaces creates friction and heat. Rolling toy cars on a rug versus a wood floor, or rubbing hands together to warm them, lines up with the work happening in class.

  • How should the year be sequenced across the three strands?

    Many teachers anchor each quarter in one strand and weave in short returns to the others. Life science fits well in fall with outdoor observation, physical science works in winter with indoor investigations, and Earth and space land in spring when sunrise and sunset shifts are easy to track.

  • Which topics usually need the most reteaching?

    Classifying odd animals like bats and penguins trips students up, since wings and water living do not always mean what they expect. Reversible versus non-reversible changes in matter also needs several rounds, especially telling melting apart from burning or baking.

  • How much of the year should be hands-on investigation?

    Plan for students to investigate something most weeks, even if it is short. The standards keep asking them to observe, measure, compare, and explain, so a steady rhythm of small investigations builds more skill than a few big units.

  • How can families support the sun, moon, and stars work?

    Notice sunrise and sunset times together, and check the moon a few nights in a row to see how its shape changes. Pointing out one bright star and naming the sun as the closest star covers a lot of what students are asked to observe.

  • What can families do to help with Earth materials and resources?

    Around the house, point out what came from the Earth: water from the tap, wood in a chair, sand in glass, rocks in a wall. Talking about which resources can grow back and which cannot gives students the language used in class.

  • How do teachers know students are ready for next year?

    By spring, students should sort animals into the main groups, describe a life cycle, explain how a push or pull changed an object, and describe a pattern in the sky. They should also write or draw a short explanation using evidence from what they observed.