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This Subtraction drill has 40 problems for Grade 2. Nature theme. Answer key included.
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Squirrel had 9 acorns but lost some today.
Standard: CCSS.MATH.2.NBT.B.5
Subtraction is one of the most essential math skills second graders use every single day, from figuring out how many snacks are left after sharing with a friend to calculating change at the store. At ages 7-8, children's brains are developing the ability to decompose numbers mentally—breaking apart quantities and understanding what remains. This worksheet builds automaticity with subtraction facts, which frees up your child's working memory so they can tackle multi-step word problems and larger numbers without feeling overwhelmed. Fluency with subtraction within 20 also supports their confidence in math and reduces anxiety around problem-solving. When students practice these facts regularly, they move from counting on their fingers to retrieving answers quickly, a critical transition for third-grade multiplication and division readiness.
Many Grade 2 students subtract the smaller number from the larger digit without considering place value—for example, solving 32 − 15 as 23 by subtracting 5 from 2 in the ones place and getting 3. Another frequent error is regrouping incorrectly: they borrow from the tens but forget to reduce that column, or they borrow but add instead of subtract. Watch for students who count backwards on their fingers inefficiently rather than using strategies like 'counting up' from the smaller number or breaking numbers into tens and ones. If your child is still using fingers for facts like 8 − 3, they likely need more practice with number bonds and visual representations.
Play 'Nature Scavenger Subtraction' during a walk or in your yard: gather small items like acorns, pebbles, or leaves into groups of 15-20, then practice subtraction by removing items and asking, 'If we started with 12 acorns and found 5 more, then gave 7 to the birds, how many are left?' This anchors abstract subtraction to concrete objects your child handles, making the concept stick far better than worksheets alone. Rotate who creates the problem so your child practices both solving and thinking like a mathematician.