A Grade 2 challenge sheet with four multiple-choice questions and five fill-ins that stretch second-grade thinking. Learners pick the right state for tricky examples like honey, morning fog, and sand, then explain in short words what happens when matter changes state. This Grade 2 worksheet stretches reasoning without going into Grade 3 molecule-level ideas, keeping the focus on what a second grader can see with eyes.

Style:
Busy Bee
States of Matter
Grade 2
★ Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the best answer for each question.
1. Honey pours slowly from a jar. What state of matter is honey?
 A) Solid
 B) Liquid
 C) Gas
 D) Not matter
2. Fog floats low over a field in the morning. What state is fog mostly?
 A) Solid rocks
 B) Gas with tiny water drops
 C) Pure liquid
 D) Not matter
3. Sand pours out of a bucket. Is sand a liquid?
 A) Yes, a liquid
 B) No, a gas
 C) No, a solid made of tiny pieces
 D) No, it is not matter
4. Which of these is a gas?
 A) Ice cube
 B) Cold milk
 C) Steam from a kettle
 D) Wooden block
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the correct answer on each line.
1) A material that flows and takes the shape of its cup is a liquid.
2) A material that holds its shape on the table is a solid.
3) A material that is often invisible and fills the whole room is a gas.
4) When we heat ice enough, it melts into water.
5) Ice, water, and steam are all the same stuff — just different states.
🎯

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9 Questions
12-18 minutes
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