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Capitalize days and holidays

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Free printable capitalize days and holidays worksheet for 2nd grade students. Part of our capitalization collection. Aligned to Common Core standards.

How do I use this worksheet?

Introduce the skill with a brief whole-class activity, such as calling out examples and asking students to give a thumbs up when they hear capitalization in a sentence. Then let students work through the worksheet independently or in pairs, referring to a class anchor chart if one is available. When reviewing answers, ask students to explain why an answer is correct rather than just confirming it. These capitalization worksheets work well as a focused practice activity, a homework assignment, or a warm-up at the start of a language arts lesson.

What students will practice

  • Students will identify and correctly use capitalization in sentences and short passages.
  • Students will distinguish capitalization from related language concepts and apply rules consistently.
  • Students will demonstrate understanding of capitalization in both reading and their own writing.

Curriculum Links

Common Core State Standards

Language · 2nd Grade

L.2.2.A

Standard: Capitalize holidays, product names, and geographic names.

View all L.2.2.A worksheets →

FAQ

How do I use this capitalization worksheet?

Introduce the skill with a brief whole-class activity, such as calling out examples and asking students to give a thumbs up when they hear capitalization in a sentence. Then let students work through the worksheet independently or in pairs, referring to a class anchor chart if one is available. When reviewing answers, ask students to explain why an answer is correct rather than just confirming it. These capitalization worksheets work well as a focused practice activity, a homework assignment, or a warm-up at the start of a language arts lesson.

What does this worksheet teach?

These capitalization worksheets for 2nd grade give students the targeted language arts practice they need to master this important grammar skill. Students identify, sort, complete, and write using capitalization through a variety of exercises designed to reinforce both recognition and application. Our capitalization worksheets connect grammar practice to reading and writing so students see how capitalization works in real language. Building a solid understanding of capitalization in 2nd grade sets students up for stronger writing and clearer communication in every subject.

What grade level is this for?

This worksheet is designed for 2nd Grade students (Ages 7-8), aligned to Common Core standard L.2.2.A. It can also be used as review for early students at the next grade level or as an introduction for advanced students.

Can I use this for homeschool or classroom?

Yes. This worksheet works for homeschool, classroom, and tutoring settings. Print individual pages for targeted practice, or print the full set as a packet. Works great as a morning warm-up, independent center activity, or fast-finisher task.

What capitalization rules should second graders know?

Second graders should consistently capitalize the first word of a sentence, the pronoun "I," proper nouns (names of people, places, holidays, product names, and geographic names), and dates, as outlined in CCSS L.2.2a. At this stage, students move beyond the first grade focus on capitalizing the first word and "I" to understanding the concept of proper nouns: words that name specific people, places, or things. They should capitalize days of the week, months of the year, cities, states, and titles of people (Mr., Mrs., Dr.). Worksheets that present sentences with missing capitals and ask students to correct them are highly effective. Activities that sort words into "capitalize" and "do not capitalize" categories help children understand the proper noun rule rather than memorizing individual words. Consistent practice builds the habit so capitalization becomes automatic in daily writing.

How do I help my second grader remember capitalization rules?

Create a simple, visual reference chart with the main rules: first word of a sentence, the word "I," names of people, names of places, days and months, and titles. Post it near your child's writing area. When your child writes, use the chart as a checklist rather than correcting every error yourself. This teaches self-editing skills. Worksheets that focus on one capitalization rule at a time let children build mastery gradually before combining rules. Proofreading exercises where children find and fix capitalization errors in a short paragraph are especially powerful because they mirror real editing. You can also play a quick game during reading time: point to a capitalized word and ask your child why it is capitalized. Connecting capitalization to meaning ("We capitalize it because it is someone's name") is more effective than teaching it as an arbitrary rule. These activities align with CCSS L.2.2a expectations.

Why do second graders struggle with capitalizing proper nouns?

The core challenge is understanding the difference between common and proper nouns. A second grader might capitalize "Dog" because it seems important to them, while leaving "texas" lowercase because they do not yet recognize it as a place name. This confusion is normal and reflects developing classification skills. Children need explicit instruction that a common noun names any general person, place, or thing (city, dog, holiday), while a proper noun names a specific one (Austin, Buddy, Thanksgiving). Sorting activities and worksheets that present pairs like "lake" versus "Lake Michigan" help make this distinction concrete. Teachers often use highlighting exercises where students mark all proper nouns in a passage. With repeated exposure and practice aligned to CCSS L.2.2a, most second graders internalize the proper noun rule by midyear. The key is focusing on the reasoning behind the rule, not just memorizing which words to capitalize.

Ratings & Reviews

3

Carlos G.

3rd Grade Teacher · Verified download

Apr 2026

Solid resource. I use these for morning work and they set a calm, focused tone for the day.

Helpful · 6

Nicole S.

Homeschool parent · Verified download

Apr 2026

Three kids at home and these work for all of them. Easy to adapt up or down a grade level depending on the day.

Helpful · 9

Rachel H.

Homeschool parent · Verified download

Jan 2026

I print these every Sunday for the week ahead. My kids never complain about worksheet time when it's ClassWeekly.

Helpful · 10

Worksheet Details

Grade2nd Grade
SubjectGrammar & Writing
TopicCapitalization
StandardL.2.2.A
Pages1 page
DifficultyMedium

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