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8 questions with a Dragons theme plus a full answer key. Perfect for Grade 2 Math.
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Grade 2 money math worksheet: Dragon Gold Adventures. Free printable with answer key for teaching coin and dollar skills.
This printable Math worksheet is designed for Grade 2 students and covers Money. The Dragons 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 and 8, children are developing the ability to think in groups and understand exchange—skills that make learning about money both developmentally appropriate and practically useful. Second graders encounter money daily through allowances, classroom stores, and family shopping, yet many haven't explicitly connected coins and bills to their values or quantities. This worksheet builds foundational numeracy by requiring students to count, compare, and combine amounts, which strengthens skip-counting skills (by 5s and 10s for nickels and dimes) and mental math. Learning to identify coins and calculate simple totals also introduces real-world problem-solving: How much does this cost? Do I have enough? These concrete experiences with money help children understand that numbers represent real value, not just abstract symbols. Additionally, early money literacy builds confidence in everyday transactions and lays the groundwork for financial thinking in later grades.
Second graders often confuse coin values, especially thinking a nickel is worth more than a dime because it looks bigger, or forgetting that a dime equals 10 pennies. Another common error is miscounting mixed coins—they may count all coins by 1s instead of skip-counting by the coin's value (5s for nickels, 10s for dimes). Watch for students who start counting from the largest coin instead of organizing coins logically, which leads to recount errors. You'll also spot confusion when students see the word 'quarter' and don't yet know it means 25 cents.
Play 'store keeper' at home using real coins and actual items (toys, snacks, books). Let your child be the cashier while you're the customer—this reverses their usual role and forces them to think about making change and confirming amounts. Start with prices under 25 cents using just pennies, nickels, and dimes. This real-money handling, combined with purposeful conversation ('That's 3 dimes, so that's 30 cents total'), embeds the values far better than worksheets alone and keeps the skill connected to genuine transactions they'll encounter.
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