First, kids trace lines on this prekindergarten writing worksheet to strengthen the fine motor skills needed to form the letter A. Then they trace the letter A!
Can your child remember the letters of the alphabet? To fill in this gaps of this St. Patrick's Day printable she'll write in the missing capital letters.
Week 1 of this independent study packet for preschoolers contains everything you need to keep young learners engaged on key skills, from practicing uppercase letters to learning two-dimensional shapes.
Fine motor skills and reading uppercase and lowercase letters come together in dot-to-dot coloring pages and mazes. Versatile games throw numbers and shapes into the mix too!
Build a better writer with this series of tracing and fine motor exercises. Small hands will get strong drawing curvy and diagonal lines, and zigzags, plus real letters.
First, kids trace lines on this prekindergarten writing worksheet to strengthen the fine motor skills needed to form the letter E. Then they trace the letter E!
Bag, cat and cap are all examples of short A words that kindergarteners will be learning to read this year. You can support this learning with a guided exploration of the short A sound. Kids will be taught how to identify the short A within text, in addition to the corresponding sound. Check out our short A printables for more phonics practice.
First, kids trace lines on this prekindergarten writing worksheet to strengthen the fine motor skills needed to form the letter B. Then they trace the letter B!
Young students can train their hands and fine motor skills with support from the Learning Library's tools on writing letters. The ABCs are broken down into simple steps so kindergartners learn to build letters line by line. There is a large supply of tracing assignments, lessons on letter sounds, and much more that familiarize kids with the 26 little letters that create a robust language.
Simple as ABC: Writing Letter Resources
In preschool through first grade, young students learn their ABCs, the building blocks to the world's greatest novels, moving speeches and profound poetry. It all starts with mastering each letter, its sound and shape. The Learning Library provides alphabet writing resources for new students to practice this powerful fundamental.
Handwriting may be a dying art form now that keyboards have largely replaced pencils. But there are still many instances where penning words down occurs, like when filling out a doctor form or writing a personal letter. Recognizing letter shapes is essential for reading, too. Education.com provides printable worksheets and teacher-created lesson plans that teach specific letters, such as Practicing P and Z is for Zookeeper. A preparatory lesson plan, Get Ready to Write! trains students' hand coordination and finger strength by instructing them to write different lines that commonly appear in letters.
Kids can leave the pencil and eraser at home and practice letter writing digitally with the resource center's online games that include a look at short A, E and U. An active hands-on activity, Fine Motor Practice, includes different exercise stations that smooths small-scale coordination capabilities, such as stringing beads and cutting paper with scissors. Guided lessons and printable workbooks on writing the alphabet can also be accessed in the library. Students will be masters of the alphabet—from A to Z—with Education.com's writing letter resources.