Description
This set of 36 Exit Tickets covers all 2nd grade Personal Financial Literacy TEKS. Topics include Deposits and Withdrawals, Producers & Consumers, Responsible vs. Irresponsible Borrowing, Lending, and Saving. These Exit Slips make excellent formative assessments and can be used for RTI progress monitoring.
The included KEY has space to record the names of students who need reteach to make record-keeping easy and simple.
This resource also includes a DATA TRACKING SYSTEM that helps you track student mastery of the TEKS and the small group intervention you do with students who are struggling. It is a useful tool to help make RTI decisions and to show your administrators how you are masterfully responding to student needs.
?There are 6 Exit Slips for each of the Personal Financial Literacy TEKS:
2.11A Calculate how money saved can accumulate into a larger amount over time
2.11B Explain that saving is an alternative to spending
2.11C Distinguish between a deposit and a withdrawal
2.11D Identify examples of borrowing and distinguish between responsible and irresponsible borrowing
2.11E Identify examples of lending and use concepts of benefits and costs to evaluate lending decisions
2.11F Differentiate between producers and consumers and calculate the cost of producing a simple item
Exit Slips will give you a quick snapshot of student understanding as you progress through your unit. ?These are an excellent assessment tool to drive your instruction and intervention!?
This is a TEKS centered resource. While others may be TEKS-aligned, they often cover Common Core standards as well. My Texas specific resources cover the TEKS and nothing but the TEKS, so that teachers dont have to spend additional time sorting through what to use and what not to use. I know how precious each and every school day is; there is no time to waste.
Check out the other Grade Level Bundles of TEKS-aligned Exit Slips:
3rd Grade Year-Long Exit Slips Bundle
4th Grade Year-Long Exit Slips Bundle
5th Grade Year-Long Exit Slips Bundle
I have included an editable version of the data tracker. Here are links to the fonts I used, which are free for personal use.