Tell Time to Five Minutes

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2nd Grade Math › Tell Time to Five Minutes

Questions 1 - 10
1

What time does the clock show?

3:25

3:20

4:25

5:00

Explanation

This question tests 2nd grade understanding of telling time to the nearest 5 minutes using analog clocks, including reading hour and minute hand positions (CCSS 2.MD.C.7: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.). An analog clock has two hands: the short, thick hour hand points to the hour (or between hours as minutes pass), and the long, thin minute hand points to the minutes. To tell time: (1) Look at hour hand—which two numbers is it between? Use the smaller number (if between 3 and 4, it's 3 o'clock-something). (2) Look at minute hand—which number does it point to? Count by 5s from 12 to that number (if at 5, count: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 = :25). (3) Combine: 3:25. When minute hand points at 12, it's o'clock (:00). At 3, it's :15 (quarter past). At 6, it's :30 (half past). At 9, it's :45 (quarter to next hour). In this problem, the analog clock shows the hour hand between 3 and 4 (closer to 4) and the minute hand pointing at 5. To find the answer, identify hour from hour hand position (between 3 and 4 = hour 3), count by 5s to minute hand (at 5 = 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 = :25), combine to get 3:25. Choice A is correct because the hour hand is between 3 and 4 (so hour is 3, not 4), and the minute hand points at 5 which is 25 minutes (counting by 5s: 1=5, 2=10, 3=15, 4=20, 5=25), making the time 3:25. This demonstrates accurate clock reading to nearest 5 minutes. Choice C represents confusing hour hand position (said 4:25 when hour hand hasn't reached 4 yet, should be 3:25). This error typically happens when students don't understand hour hand moves gradually. To help students: Use large demonstration clock with moveable hands. Teach hand identification: 'Short hand = hour (it takes hours to move), Long hand = minute (minutes move fast).' Practice hour hand position: show 3:00 (hour hand right at 3), then move minute hand to 6 (hour hand moves halfway to 4 for 3:30). Teach counting by 5s for minutes: number 1 on clock = :05 (skip count: 5), number 2 = :10 (skip count: 5, 10), and so on. Use rhyme: 'When minute hand points to 6, we say half past 3:00, that's 3:30—don't be tricked!' Practice key times: o'clock (:00, minute hand at 12), half past (:30, minute hand at 6), quarter past (:15, minute hand at 3), quarter to next hour (:45, minute hand at 9). Have students practice reading: 'Hour hand is between ___ and ___, so hour is ___. Minute hand points at , count by 5s: 5, 10, 15... = :. Time is :.' For drawing, remind: hour hand doesn't point directly at hour unless it's exactly o'clock. Connect to daily schedule: 'Recess is at 10:15. Let's read the clock at recess time.' Watch for: confusing which hand is which, not noticing hour hand moves gradually, miscounting by 5s, reading minute hand position as hour, forgetting :30 is half past (not :15), not combining both hands to get full time.

2

It was $2:00$. Now it is $2:30$. How many minutes passed?

15 minutes

60 minutes

30 minutes

20 minutes

Explanation

This question tests 2nd grade understanding of telling time to the nearest 5 minutes using analog clocks, including reading hour and minute hand positions (CCSS 2.MD.C.7: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.). An analog clock has two hands: the short, thick hour hand points to the hour (or between hours as minutes pass), and the long, thin minute hand points to the minutes. To tell time: (1) Look at hour hand—which two numbers is it between? Use the smaller number (if between 3 and 4, it's 3 o'clock-something). (2) Look at minute hand—which number does it point to? Count by 5s from 12 to that number (if at 5, count: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 = $:25$). (3) Combine: $3:25$. Describe key times: When minute hand points at 12, it's o'clock ($:00$). At 3, it's $:15$ (quarter past). At 6, it's $:30$ (half past). At 9, it's $:45$ (quarter to next hour). In this problem, it was $2:00$ and now it's $2:30$, asking how many minutes passed. To find the answer, subtract the times or count the minutes from $2:00$ to $2:30$, which is 30 minutes. Choice C is correct because from $2:00$ to $2:30$ is 30 minutes passed. This demonstrates accurate clock reading to nearest 5 minutes. Choice D represents confusing minutes with hours (said 60 minutes, which is one hour). This error typically happens when students can't count by 5s accurately. To help students: Use large demonstration clock with moveable hands. Teach hand identification: 'Short hand = hour (it takes hours to move), Long hand = minute (minutes move fast).' Practice hour hand position: show $3:00$ (hour hand right at 3), then move minute hand to 6 (hour hand moves halfway to 4 for $3:30$). Teach counting by 5s for minutes: number 1 on clock = $:05$ (skip count: 5), number 2 = $:10$ (skip count: 5, 10), and so on. Use rhyme: 'When minute hand points to 6, we say half past $3:00$, that's $3:30$—don't be tricked!' Practice key times: o'clock ($:00$, minute hand at 12), half past ($:30$, minute hand at 6), quarter past ($:15$, minute hand at 3), quarter to next hour ($:45$, minute hand at 9). Have students practice reading: 'Hour hand is between ___ and ___, so hour is ___. Minute hand points at , count by 5s: 5, 10, 15... = $:$. Time is :$$.' For drawing, remind: hour hand doesn't point directly at hour unless it's exactly o'clock. Connect to daily schedule: 'Recess is at $10:15$. Let's read the clock at recess time.' Watch for: confusing which hand is which, not noticing hour hand moves gradually, miscounting by 5s, reading minute hand position as hour, forgetting $:30$ is half past (not $:15$), not combining both hands to get full time.

3

What time is half past 6?

7:30

6:45

6:30

6:15

Explanation

This question tests 2nd grade understanding of telling time to the nearest 5 minutes using analog clocks, including reading hour and minute hand positions (CCSS 2.MD.C.7: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.). An analog clock has two hands: the short, thick hour hand points to the hour (or between hours as minutes pass), and the long, thin minute hand points to the minutes. To tell time: (1) Look at hour hand—which two numbers is it between? Use the smaller number (if between 3 and 4, it's 3 o'clock-something). (2) Look at minute hand—which number does it point to? Count by 5s from 12 to that number (if at 5, count: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 = :25). (3) Combine: 3:25. When minute hand points at 12, it's o'clock (:00). At 3, it's :15 (quarter past). At 6, it's :30 (half past). At 9, it's :45 (quarter to next hour). In this problem, identify the time for half past 6. To find the answer, know that half past means :30, so 6:30 with minute hand at 6 and hour hand halfway between 6 and 7. Choice B is correct because half past 6 means 30 minutes after 6 o'clock which is 6:30 (minute hand at 6). This demonstrates accurate understanding of time vocabulary to nearest 5 minutes. Choice A represents vocabulary error (said 6:15, confusing half past with quarter past). This error typically happens when students don't know half past means :30, not :15. To help students: Use large demonstration clock with moveable hands. Teach hand identification: 'Short hand = hour (it takes hours to move), Long hand = minute (minutes move fast).' Practice hour hand position: show 3:00 (hour hand right at 3), then move minute hand to 6 (hour hand moves halfway to 4 for 3:30). Teach counting by 5s for minutes: number 1 on clock = :05 (skip count: 5), number 2 = :10 (skip count: 5, 10), and so on. Use rhyme: 'When minute hand points to 6, we say half past 3:00, that's 3:30—don't be tricked!' Practice key times: o'clock (:00, minute hand at 12), half past (:30, minute hand at 6), quarter past (:15, minute hand at 3), quarter to next hour (:45, minute hand at 9). Have students practice reading: 'Hour hand is between ___ and ___, so hour is ___. Minute hand points at , count by 5s: 5, 10, 15... = :. Time is :.' For drawing, remind: hour hand doesn't point directly at hour unless it's exactly o'clock. Connect to daily schedule: 'Recess is at 10:15. Let's read the clock at recess time.' Watch for: confusing which hand is which, not noticing hour hand moves gradually, miscounting by 5s, reading minute hand position as hour, forgetting :30 is half past (not :15), not combining both hands to get full time.

4

Look at the clock. What time does it show?

9:45

8:50

8:45

8:15

Explanation

This question tests 2nd grade understanding of telling time to the nearest 5 minutes using analog clocks, including reading hour and minute hand positions (CCSS 2.MD.C.7: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.). An analog clock has two hands: the short, thick hour hand points to the hour (or between hours as minutes pass), and the long, thin minute hand points to the minutes. To tell time: (1) Look at hour hand—which two numbers is it between? Use the smaller number (if between 3 and 4, it's 3 o'clock-something). (2) Look at minute hand—which number does it point to? Count by 5s from 12 to that number (if at 5, count: $5, 10, 15, 20, 25 = :25$). (3) Combine: 3:25. When minute hand points at 12, it's o'clock (:00). At 3, it's :15 (quarter past). At 6, it's :30 (half past). At 9, it's :45 (quarter to next hour). In this problem, the analog clock shows the hour hand between 8 and 9 (close to 9) and the minute hand pointing at 9. To find the answer, identify hour from hour hand position (between 8 and 9 = hour 8), count by 5s to minute hand (at 9 = $5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45 = :45$), combine to get 8:45. Choice A is correct because the hour hand is between 8 and 9 (so hour is 8, not 9), and the minute hand points at 9 which is 45 minutes (counting by 5s: 1=5, 2=10, ..., 9=45), making the time 8:45, or quarter to 9. This demonstrates accurate clock reading to nearest 5 minutes. Choice B represents ignoring hour hand position (said 9:45 when hour hand hasn't reached 9 yet, should be 8:45). This error typically happens when students don't understand hour hand moves gradually. To help students: Use large demonstration clock with moveable hands. Teach hand identification: 'Short hand = hour (it takes hours to move), Long hand = minute (minutes move fast).' Practice hour hand position: show 3:00 (hour hand right at 3), then move minute hand to 6 (hour hand moves halfway to 4 for 3:30). Teach counting by 5s for minutes: number 1 on clock = :05 (skip count: 5), number 2 = :10 (skip count: 5, 10), and so on. Use rhyme: 'When minute hand points to 6, we say half past 3:00, that's 3:30—don't be tricked!' Practice key times: o'clock (:00, minute hand at 12), half past (:30, minute hand at 6), quarter past (:15, minute hand at 3), quarter to next hour (:45, minute hand at 9). Have students practice reading: 'Hour hand is between ___ and ___, so hour is ___. Minute hand points at , count by 5s: 5, 10, 15... = :. Time is :.' For drawing, remind: hour hand doesn't point directly at hour unless it's exactly o'clock. Connect to daily schedule: 'Recess is at 10:15. Let's read the clock at recess time.' Watch for: confusing which hand is which, not noticing hour hand moves gradually, miscounting by 5s, reading minute hand position as hour, forgetting :30 is half past (not :15), not combining both hands to get full time.

5

What time is half past 3?

3:45

3:00

3:30

3:15

Explanation

This question tests 2nd grade understanding of telling time to the nearest 5 minutes using analog clocks, including reading hour and minute hand positions (CCSS 2.MD.C.7: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.). An analog clock has two hands: the short, thick hour hand points to the hour (or between hours as minutes pass), and the long, thin minute hand points to the minutes. To tell time: (1) Look at hour hand—which two numbers is it between? Use the smaller number (if between 3 and 4, it's 3 o'clock-something). (2) Look at minute hand—which number does it point to? Count by 5s from 12 to that number (if at 5, count: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 = :25). (3) Combine: 3:25. Describe key times: When minute hand points at 12, it's o'clock (:00). At 3, it's :15 (quarter past). At 6, it's :30 (half past). At 9, it's :45 (quarter to next hour). In this problem, the question asks for the time that is half past 3, without a clock shown. To find the answer, know that half past means :30, so for 3 it's 3:30 (minute hand at 6, hour hand halfway to 4). Choice B is correct because half past 3 means 30 minutes after 3 o'clock which is 3:30 (minute hand at 6). This demonstrates accurate clock reading to nearest 5 minutes. Choice A represents vocabulary error (said half past 3 is 3:15 instead of 3:30). This error typically happens when students don't know time vocabulary. To help students: Use large demonstration clock with moveable hands. Teach hand identification: 'Short hand = hour (it takes hours to move), Long hand = minute (minutes move fast).' Practice hour hand position: show 3:00 (hour hand right at 3), then move minute hand to 6 (hour hand moves halfway to 4 for 3:30). Teach counting by 5s for minutes: number 1 on clock = :05 (skip count: 5), number 2 = :10 (skip count: 5, 10), and so on. Use rhyme: 'When minute hand points to 6, we say half past 3:00, that's 3:30—don't be tricked!' Practice key times: o'clock (:00, minute hand at 12), half past (:30, minute hand at 6), quarter past (:15, minute hand at 3), quarter to next hour (:45, minute hand at 9). Have students practice reading: 'Hour hand is between ___ and ___, so hour is ___. Minute hand points at , count by 5s: 5, 10, 15... = :. Time is :.' For drawing, remind: hour hand doesn't point directly at hour unless it's exactly o'clock. Connect to daily schedule: 'Recess is at 10:15. Let's read the clock at recess time.' Watch for: confusing which hand is which, not noticing hour hand moves gradually, miscounting by 5s, reading minute hand position as hour, forgetting :30 is half past (not :15), not combining both hands to get full time.

6

It is 1:10. What will the clock show in 15 minutes?

1:15

1:20

1:30

1:25

Explanation

This question tests 2nd grade understanding of telling time to the nearest 5 minutes using analog clocks, including reading hour and minute hand positions (CCSS 2.MD.C.7: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.). An analog clock has two hands: the short, thick hour hand points to the hour (or between hours as minutes pass), and the long, thin minute hand points to the minutes. To tell time: (1) Look at hour hand—which two numbers is it between? Use the smaller number (if between 3 and 4, it's 3 o'clock-something). (2) Look at minute hand—which number does it point to? Count by 5s from 12 to that number (if at 5, count: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 = :25). (3) Combine: 3:25. When minute hand points at 12, it's o'clock (:00). At 3, it's :15 (quarter past). At 6, it's :30 (half past). At 9, it's :45 (quarter to next hour). In this problem, it is currently 1:10, and student must find the time in 15 minutes. To find the answer, add 15 minutes to 1:10: 10 + 15 = 25, so 1:25 (staying in the 1 o'clock hour since 25 < 60). Choice C is correct because adding 15 minutes to 1:10 gives 1:25 (10 + 15 = 25 minutes past 1). This demonstrates accurate time addition to nearest 5 minutes. Choice D represents overcounting (said 1:30, perhaps added 20 instead of 15). This error typically happens when students can't count by 5s accurately. To help students: Use large demonstration clock with moveable hands. Teach hand identification: 'Short hand = hour (it takes hours to move), Long hand = minute (minutes move fast).' Practice hour hand position: show 3:00 (hour hand right at 3), then move minute hand to 6 (hour hand moves halfway to 4 for 3:30). Teach counting by 5s for minutes: number 1 on clock = :05 (skip count: 5), number 2 = :10 (skip count: 5, 10), and so on. Use rhyme: 'When minute hand points to 6, we say half past 3:00, that's 3:30—don't be tricked!' Practice key times: o'clock (:00, minute hand at 12), half past (:30, minute hand at 6), quarter past (:15, minute hand at 3), quarter to next hour (:45, minute hand at 9). Have students practice reading: 'Hour hand is between ___ and ___, so hour is ___. Minute hand points at , count by 5s: 5, 10, 15... = :. Time is :.' For drawing, remind: hour hand doesn't point directly at hour unless it's exactly o'clock. Connect to daily schedule: 'Recess is at 10:15. Let's read the clock at recess time.' Watch for: confusing which hand is which, not noticing hour hand moves gradually, miscounting by 5s, reading minute hand position as hour, forgetting :30 is half past (not :15), not combining both hands to get full time.

7

Look at the clock. What time is it?

7:25

7:00

6:30

7:30

Explanation

This question tests 2nd grade understanding of telling time to the nearest 5 minutes using analog clocks, including reading hour and minute hand positions (CCSS 2.MD.C.7: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.). An analog clock has two hands: the short, thick hour hand points to the hour (or between hours as minutes pass), and the long, thin minute hand points to the minutes. To tell time: (1) Look at hour hand—which two numbers is it between? Use the smaller number (if between 3 and 4, it's 3 o'clock-something). (2) Look at minute hand—which number does it point to? Count by 5s from 12 to that number (if at 5, count: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 $ = :25 $). (3) Combine: 3:25. When minute hand points at 12, it's o'clock (:00). At 3, it's :15 (quarter past). At 6, it's :30 (half past). At 9, it's :45 (quarter to next hour). In this problem, the analog clock shows the hour hand between 7 and 8 (halfway) and the minute hand pointing at 6. To find the answer, identify hour from hour hand position (between 7 and 8 = hour 7), count by 5s to minute hand (at 6 = 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 = :30), combine to get 7:30. Choice B is correct because the hour hand is between 7 and 8 (so hour is 7, not 8), and the minute hand points at 6 which is 30 minutes (counting by 5s: $1=5$, $2=10$, $3=15$, $4=20$, $5=25$, $6=30$), making the time 7:30, or half past 7 means 30 minutes after 7 o'clock which is 7:30 (minute hand at 6). This demonstrates accurate clock reading to nearest 5 minutes. Choice C represents miscounting minutes by 5s or confusing hour (said 6:30 when hour hand is past 7, or thought minute at 6 means hour 6). This error typically happens when students can't count by 5s accurately or ignore hour hand position. To help students: Use large demonstration clock with moveable hands. Teach hand identification: 'Short hand = hour (it takes hours to move), Long hand = minute (minutes move fast).' Practice hour hand position: show 3:00 (hour hand right at 3), then move minute hand to 6 (hour hand moves halfway to 4 for 3:30). Teach counting by 5s for minutes: number 1 on clock = :05 (skip count: 5), number 2 = :10 (skip count: 5, 10), and so on. Use rhyme: 'When minute hand points to 6, we say half past 3:00, that's 3:30—don't be tricked!' Practice key times: o'clock (:00, minute hand at 12), half past (:30, minute hand at 6), quarter past (:15, minute hand at 3), quarter to next hour (:45, minute hand at 9). Have students practice reading: 'Hour hand is between ___ and ___, so hour is ___. Minute hand points at , count by 5s: 5, 10, 15... = :. Time is :.' For drawing, remind: hour hand doesn't point directly at hour unless it's exactly o'clock. Connect to daily schedule: 'Recess is at 10:15. Let's read the clock at recess time.' Watch for: confusing which hand is which, not noticing hour hand moves gradually, miscounting by 5s, reading minute hand position as hour, forgetting :30 is half past (not :15), not combining both hands to get full time.

8

Which time is later: 3:15 or 3:40?

3:40

They are the same

You cannot tell

3:15

Explanation

This question tests 2nd grade understanding of telling time to the nearest 5 minutes using analog clocks, including reading hour and minute hand positions (CCSS 2.MD.C.7: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.). An analog clock has two hands: the short, thick hour hand points to the hour (or between hours as minutes pass), and the long, thin minute hand points to the minutes. To tell time: (1) Look at hour hand—which two numbers is it between? Use the smaller number (if between 3 and 4, it's 3 o'clock-something). (2) Look at minute hand—which number does it point to? Count by 5s from 12 to that number (if at 5, count: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 = :25). (3) Combine: 3:25. When minute hand points at 12, it's o'clock (:00). At 3, it's :15 (quarter past). At 6, it's :30 (half past). At 9, it's :45 (quarter to next hour). In this problem, compare 3:15 and 3:40 to see which is later. To find the answer, note that both are in the 3 o'clock hour, but 40 minutes is more than 15 minutes past 3, so 3:40 is later. Choice B is correct because 3:40 comes after 3:15 in the same hour, as 40 > 15 minutes past the hour. This demonstrates accurate comparison of times to nearest 5 minutes. Choice A represents ignoring minute comparison (picked the smaller minute number as later). This error typically happens when students don't understand how minutes progress within an hour. To help students: Use large demonstration clock with moveable hands. Teach hand identification: 'Short hand = hour (it takes hours to move), Long hand = minute (minutes move fast).' Practice hour hand position: show 3:00 (hour hand right at 3), then move minute hand to 6 (hour hand moves halfway to 4 for 3:30). Teach counting by 5s for minutes: number 1 on clock = :05 (skip count: 5), number 2 = :10 (skip count: 5, 10), and so on. Use rhyme: 'When minute hand points to 6, we say half past 3:00, that's 3:30—don't be tricked!' Practice key times: o'clock (:00, minute hand at 12), half past (:30, minute hand at 6), quarter past (:15, minute hand at 3), quarter to next hour (:45, minute hand at 9). Have students practice reading: 'Hour hand is between ___ and ___, so hour is ___. Minute hand points at , count by 5s: 5, 10, 15... = :. Time is :.' For drawing, remind: hour hand doesn't point directly at hour unless it's exactly o'clock. Connect to daily schedule: 'Recess is at 10:15. Let's read the clock at recess time.' Watch for: confusing which hand is which, not noticing hour hand moves gradually, miscounting by 5s, reading minute hand position as hour, forgetting :30 is half past (not :15), not combining both hands to get full time.

9

Draw the hands on the clock to show 4:20.

Minute hand at 4; hour hand between 4 and 5

Minute hand at 5; hour hand between 4 and 5

Minute hand at 4; hour hand on 4

Minute hand at 8; hour hand between 4 and 5

Explanation

This question tests 2nd grade understanding of telling time to the nearest 5 minutes using analog clocks, including reading hour and minute hand positions (CCSS 2.MD.C.7: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.). An analog clock has two hands: the short, thick hour hand points to the hour (or between hours as minutes pass), and the long, thin minute hand points to the minutes. To tell time: (1) Look at hour hand—which two numbers is it between? Use the smaller number (if between 3 and 4, it's 3 o'clock-something). (2) Look at minute hand—which number does it point to? Count by 5s from 12 to that number (if at 5, count: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 = :25). (3) Combine: 3:25. When minute hand points at 12, it's o'clock (:00). At 3, it's :15 (quarter past). At 6, it's :30 (half past). At 9, it's :45 (quarter to next hour). In this problem, student must draw hands for 4:20. To find the answer, for drawing 4:20, put hour hand between 4 and 5, minute hand at 4. Choice A is correct because drawing 4:20 requires hour hand between 4 and 5 (because 20 minutes into the 4 o'clock hour) and minute hand at 4 (which represents :20). This demonstrates accurate clock reading to nearest 5 minutes. Choice C represents ignoring hour hand position (hour hand on 4 as if o'clock, but should be between 4 and 5 for :20). This error typically happens when students don't understand hour hand moves gradually. To help students: Use large demonstration clock with moveable hands. Teach hand identification: 'Short hand = hour (it takes hours to move), Long hand = minute (minutes move fast).' Practice hour hand position: show 3:00 (hour hand right at 3), then move minute hand to 6 (hour hand moves halfway to 4 for 3:30). Teach counting by 5s for minutes: number 1 on clock = :05 (skip count: 5), number 2 = :10 (skip count: 5, 10), and so on. Use rhyme: 'When minute hand points to 6, we say half past 3:00, that's 3:30—don't be tricked!' Practice key times: o'clock (:00, minute hand at 12), half past (:30, minute hand at 6), quarter past (:15, minute hand at 3), quarter to next hour (:45, minute hand at 9). Have students practice reading: 'Hour hand is between ___ and ___, so hour is ___. Minute hand points at , count by 5s: 5, 10, 15... = :. Time is :.' For drawing, remind: hour hand doesn't point directly at hour unless it's exactly o'clock. Connect to daily schedule: 'Recess is at 10:15. Let's read the clock at recess time.' Watch for: confusing which hand is which, not noticing hour hand moves gradually, miscounting by 5s, reading minute hand position as hour, forgetting :30 is half past (not :15), not combining both hands to get full time.

10

Which time is half past 3?

3:00

3:45

3:30

3:15

Explanation

This question tests 2nd grade understanding of telling time to the nearest 5 minutes using analog clocks, including reading hour and minute hand positions (CCSS 2.MD.C.7: Tell and write time from analog and digital clocks to the nearest five minutes, using a.m. and p.m.). An analog clock has two hands: the short, thick hour hand points to the hour (or between hours as minutes pass), and the long, thin minute hand points to the minutes. To tell time: (1) Look at hour hand—which two numbers is it between? Use the smaller number (if between 3 and 4, it's 3 o'clock-something). (2) Look at minute hand—which number does it point to? Count by 5s from 12 to that number (if at 5, count: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 = :25). (3) Combine: 3:25. Describe key times: When minute hand points at 12, it's o'clock (:00). At 3, it's :15 (quarter past). At 6, it's :30 (half past). At 9, it's :45 (quarter to next hour). In this problem, student must identify which time means half past 3. To find the answer, know that half past means :30, so 3:30 (minute hand at 6, hour hand halfway between 3 and 4). Choice B is correct because half past 3 means 30 minutes after 3 o'clock which is 3:30 (minute hand at 6). This demonstrates accurate understanding of time vocabulary to nearest 5 minutes. Choice A represents vocabulary error (said half past 3 is 3:15 instead of 3:30). This error typically happens when students confuse half past with quarter past. To help students: Use large demonstration clock with moveable hands. Teach hand identification: 'Short hand = hour (it takes hours to move), Long hand = minute (minutes move fast).' Practice hour hand position: show 3:00 (hour hand right at 3), then move minute hand to 6 (hour hand moves halfway to 4 for 3:30). Teach counting by 5s for minutes: number 1 on clock = :05 (skip count: 5), number 2 = :10 (skip count: 5, 10), and so on. Use rhyme: 'When minute hand points to 6, we say half past 3:00, that's 3:30—don't be tricked!' Practice key times: o'clock (:00, minute hand at 12), half past (:30, minute hand at 6), quarter past (:15, minute hand at 3), quarter to next hour (:45, minute hand at 9). Have students practice reading: 'Hour hand is between ___ and ___, so hour is ___. Minute hand points at , count by 5s: 5, 10, 15... = :. Time is :.' For drawing, remind: hour hand doesn't point directly at hour unless it's exactly o'clock. Connect to daily schedule: 'Recess is at 10:15. Let's read the clock at recess time.' Watch for: confusing which hand is which, not noticing hour hand moves gradually, miscounting by 5s, reading minute hand position as hour, forgetting :30 is half past (not :15), not combining both hands to get full time.