Printable worksheet — download and print instantly
Click any image to view full size · US Letter · Instant download
8 questions with a Arctic theme plus a full answer key. Perfect for Grade 2 Math.
⬇ Download WorksheetNew themed worksheets added daily. For parents, teachers, and homeschool families.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
Grade 2 Arctic math worksheet on telling time. Free printable with answer key for fun polar learning activities.
This printable Math worksheet is designed for Grade 2 students and covers Time. The Arctic theme keeps kids engaged while they practice essential Math skills. Every worksheet includes a full answer key making it easy for parents and teachers to check work instantly. Aligned to Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for Grade 2 Math. Print-ready at US Letter size. No login required — download and print in seconds.
Last updated: March 2026
At age 7-8, children are developing the cognitive ability to sequence events and understand how time structures their day. Telling time—whether reading analog or digital clocks, understanding hour and half-hour intervals, or ordering daily activities—builds executive function skills that help students manage transitions, follow schedules, and develop independence. Grade 2 is the critical window when students move from vague time concepts ("after lunch" or "tomorrow") to concrete, measurable units. Mastering these skills reduces anxiety around schedules, helps with transitions between activities, and strengthens number sense through clock faces. When a child can tell time, they're also learning responsibility—knowing when to get ready for school or when an activity ends matters deeply to their growing sense of agency. These skills transfer directly to reading timelines, understanding routines, and eventually managing homework and activities as they grow.
Many Grade 2 students confuse the hour and minute hands because they focus on which hand is longer rather than which is shorter. You'll notice this when they read 3:00 as 12:03 or say the minute hand controls the hour. Another common error is thinking time only moves forward without grasping that clocks repeat in cycles—they may struggle to understand that 1:00 happens twice daily. Watch for students who can read a clock in isolation but can't connect it to their schedule, saying "3 o'clock" looks right without checking whether it matches breakfast or bedtime.
Create a simple visual schedule at home using pictures and clock faces showing when key activities happen: breakfast at 7:30, school pickup at 3:00, dinner at 6:00. Each morning, point to the current time on a real clock and then to the next scheduled activity, asking your child, 'What time do we need to leave?' This grounds abstract clock reading in concrete, repeated routines. Over weeks, your child builds both time-telling skills and the ability to anticipate transitions—a skill that reduces resistance to schedule changes and builds confidence. Repeat the same times most days so patterns become predictable.
Examel provides 10,000+ printable worksheets for Grades 1–6, aligned to Common Core State Standards. Every worksheet is reviewed for accuracy and includes a full answer key. New worksheets added weekly across Math, English, and Science. Built by educators for parents, teachers, and homeschool families.