Clock or Calendar?

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Clock or Calendar?
Clock or Calendar?

Free printable clock or calendar? worksheet for 2nd grade students. Part of our clock or calendar? telling time collection. Aligned to Common Core standards.

How do I use this worksheet?

Before handing out the worksheet, briefly introduce the concept with a short oral warm-up or a visual model on the board. Encourage students to talk through their thinking as they work: "What strategy are you using? How do you know that is right?" After completing the worksheet, review any missed problems together and discuss the reasoning rather than just the answer. For extra support, let students use manipulatives or draw pictures alongside the written problems. These clock or calendar? worksheets work well as daily practice, homework, or a focused review activity.

What students will practice

  • Students will recognize and apply clock or calendar? concepts using grade-appropriate strategies and models.
  • Students will solve problems involving clock or calendar? with increasing accuracy and confidence.
  • Students will connect clock or calendar? skills to real-world situations and explain their reasoning clearly.


Curriculum Links

Common Core State Standards

Measurement and Data · 2nd Grade

2.MD.C.7

Standard: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.

View all 2.MD.C.7 worksheets →

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FAQ

How do I use this clock or calendar? worksheet?

Before handing out the worksheet, briefly introduce the concept with a short oral warm-up or a visual model on the board. Encourage students to talk through their thinking as they work: "What strategy are you using? How do you know that is right?" After completing the worksheet, review any missed problems together and discuss the reasoning rather than just the answer. For extra support, let students use manipulatives or draw pictures alongside the written problems. These clock or calendar? worksheets work well as daily practice, homework, or a focused review activity.

What does this worksheet teach?

These clock or calendar? worksheets for 2nd grade give students the structured, hands-on practice they need to build confidence and fluency. Students work through a range of problem formats, from visual models and diagrams to written equations and word problems, so they encounter clock or calendar? from every angle. Each worksheet is designed to build on prior knowledge while introducing the level of challenge appropriate for 2nd grade. Practicing clock or calendar? at this stage strengthens the mathematical foundations that support more advanced concepts in later grades.

What grade level is this for?

This worksheet is designed for 2nd Grade students (Ages 7-8), aligned to Common Core standard 2.MD.C.7. 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 time-telling skills should second graders master?

Second graders should tell and write time to the nearest five minutes using both analog and digital clocks, and use a.m. and p.m. appropriately (CCSS 2.MD.C.7). They should understand that there are 60 minutes in an hour and know what the minute hand means at each number on the clock face (the 3 means 15 minutes, the 6 means 30 minutes, and so on). Students should also solve simple word problems involving time, such as determining what time it will be in 30 minutes. Worksheets that present analog clock faces and ask children to write the time in digital format, and vice versa, build fluency in reading both clock types. This skill extends the first-grade focus on hours and half hours to the more precise five-minute intervals.

How do you teach telling time to the nearest five minutes?

Build on first-grade skills by reviewing o'clock and half-past times. Then introduce the minute numbers around the clock: point out that each number represents 5 minutes (1 means 5 minutes, 2 means 10 minutes, and so on through 12 meaning 60 minutes). Practice skip counting by 5s around the clock face. Use a demonstration clock with movable hands and count the minutes as you move the minute hand from number to number. Worksheets that label the 5-minute intervals on the clock face help children who are still memorizing the positions. Practice with real-life scenarios ("soccer practice starts at 4:15") connects the skill to daily life. Consistent daily clock reading during classroom transitions reinforces the skill naturally.

What is the difference between a.m. and p.m. and when do second graders learn this?

A.m. (ante meridiem) covers midnight to noon, and p.m. (post meridiem) covers noon to midnight. Second graders learn this distinction as part of CCSS 2.MD.C.7. The concept is best taught through daily routines: breakfast at 7:00 a.m., school starts at 8:30 a.m., lunch at 12:00 p.m., dinner at 6:00 p.m., bedtime at 8:00 p.m. Children struggle with this concept because 12:00 can be either noon or midnight, and the transition from a.m. to p.m. at noon is not intuitive. Worksheets that list daily activities and ask students to label each with a.m. or p.m. connect the concept to real life. Discussing what would be strange (eating dinner at 6:00 a.m.) helps children reason about the distinction logically.

Ratings & Reviews

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Reviews are for ClassWeekly members.

Tom B.

Learning Specialist · Verified member

Mar 2026

I recommend these to the families I work with. The clear layout is ideal for students who need reduced visual noise.

Emily W.

Homeschool parent · Verified member

Mar 2026

We've tried a lot of printable worksheets but these are consistently the best quality. My son asks to do them.

Sarah K.

Kindergarten Teacher · Verified member

Mar 2026

Used these with my class. The clear format worked perfectly for students still building confidence. I print a new set every week.

Nicole S.

Homeschool parent · Verified member

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.

Rachel H.

Homeschool parent · Verified member

Jan 2026

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

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Worksheet Details

Grade2nd Grade
SubjectMath
TopicTelling Time
Standard2.MD.C.7
Pages1 page
DifficultyMedium

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