2nd Grade Outdoor Activities

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Looking for games and activities to keep your child busy? Second grade is all about real world applications - from math activities that teach about money, to games that develop reading comprehension, we've got fresh ideas to keep learning going long after the school bell rings.

More outdoor activities for second grade:

Make a Self Portrait from Nature

Make a Self Portrait from Nature

Kids of all ages enjoy creating self-portraits. Add a fun and unique twist by having your child use nature as her palette!

Puddle Science: Watch Evaporation in Action

Puddle Science: Watch Evaporation in Action

So how can you make the challenging science concept of evaporation more visible to your second grader? Try this activity, in which your budding scientist collects information about a puddle that seems to disappear before his very eyes!

Write a Backyard Field Guide

Write a Backyard Field Guide

A great way to combine your child's natural curiosity with his developing classification and writing skills is to have him create a field guide to the plants and animals he observes. Here's how to get started.

Play Pattern Hopscotch!

Play Pattern Hopscotch!

Creating number patterns with pencil and paper can be dull. But creating patterns with hopscotch? Exciting! Get your child's game on, and give her some math practice in the process.

Count

Count 'N Catch: A Skip Counting Game

Encourage your child to practice skip counting by transforming number patterns with this fun and interactive game of catch. It will get your child moving and learning, ball in hand!

Make Your Own Rainbow!

Make Your Own Rainbow!

Studying the weather is one of the easiest and least expensive ways to introduce your child to science. Now you don't need to wait for rain to see a rainbow. Make one in your own kitchen, and teach your child about light and weather in the process.

Learn Where Wind Comes From

Learn Where Wind Comes From

Does your child always demand to know why the sky is blue, how the sun moves across the sky, or where wind comes from? Then this experiment is for you! Demonstrate how wind is created with an entertaining activity, and introduce your child to the wild ways that weather works.