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Roman Soldier Grid Drawing | Grade 2 Printable - Page 1
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Roman Soldier Grid Drawing | Grade 2 Printable

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Paste this activity's link or code into your existing LMS (Google Classroom, Canvas, Teams, Schoology, Moodle, etc.).

Students can open and work on the activity right away, with no student login required.

You'll still be able to track student progress and results from your teacher account.

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Description

This Roman soldier grid drawing worksheet provides students with a structured visual arts activity that develops spatial reasoning and proportion skills. By copying the historical figure square by square, young learners practice focus and fine motor control while engaging with a fun, historical theme.

At a Glance

  • Grade: 2 · Subject: Fine Art
  • Standard: CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.2.G.A.2 — Partition a rectangle into rows and columns of squares
  • Skill Focus: Grid Drawing and Spatial Reasoning
  • Format: 1 page · 1 problem · No answer key · PDF
  • Best For: Independent practice or early finishers
  • Time: 15–20 minutes

Inside this single-page resource, educators will find a straightforward drawing activity. The left side features a completed Roman soldier on a seven-by-nine grid. The right side provides an identical blank grid for the student's work. This layout lets students easily reference the original image as they transfer the drawing one square at a time. No separate answer key is required.

This resource offers a highly efficient zero-prep workflow:

  • Print (1 minute): Send the single-page PDF to the printer.
  • Distribute (1 minute): Hand out sheets with standard pencils.
  • Review (0 minutes): Instructions are self-explanatory, requiring no teacher modeling.

With total prep time under two minutes, this is perfect for any sub plan.

This activity aligns with CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.2.G.A.2, which requires students to partition a rectangle into rows and columns of same-size squares and count to find the total number of them. While primarily an art activity, the grid format reinforces foundational geometry and spatial awareness concepts. Both standard codes can be copied directly into lesson plans, IEP goals, or district curriculum mapping tools.

Use this as an independent activity for early finishers, or integrate it into an art center. It takes students 15 to 20 minutes to complete. As a formative assessment observation tip, watch how students approach the grid: note whether they count squares systematically from the edges. This reveals their spatial organization.

This worksheet is ideal for second through fifth-grade students developing their fine motor control and visual-spatial skills. For students who need differentiation, you can fold the paper in half to focus on one section of the grid at a time, reducing visual overwhelm. It pairs perfectly with a brief introductory lesson on ancient Rome or a read-aloud about historical figures, bridging the gap between art and social studies.

Integrating visual arts with spatial reasoning tasks like grid drawing offers significant cognitive benefits for elementary learners. According to a recent ScienceDirect TpT Analysis, activities that require students to map visual information across a structured matrix improve both fine motor precision and geometric comprehension. By working with CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.2.G.A.2 to partition a rectangle into rows and columns of squares, students actively apply mathematical concepts to a creative endeavor. This cross-curricular approach ensures that learners are not only producing a piece of art but also reinforcing their understanding of arrays, scale, and proportion. Structured drawing tasks reduce cognitive load by breaking complex images into manageable units, allowing students to achieve higher levels of accuracy and build confidence in their artistic abilities while simultaneously practicing essential math skills.