The letter A mini-book is an exceptional activity for recognizing letter A, beginning sound, and tracing the lowercase letter A. Great for Preschool and Kindergarten.

Letter A Worksheets & Printables
Browse letter A worksheets and printables that help children build fundamental skills, like recognizing the letter A, writing it, and associating it with its beginning sound. Perfect for preschool and kindergarten, these resources cover all aspects of learning the letter A.
Letter A worksheets for preschoolers focus on introducing the basic shape and form of the letter A. Activities involve tracing, coloring, and identifying things that start with the letter A. Incorporate vibrant visuals and simple activities to capture attention and curiosity. Print uppercase or lowercase letter A templates and fill them with objects beginning with A. Incorporate apples, apricots, astronauts, alligators, accordions, and axes to teach the short /ă/ sound. For the long /ā/ sound, involve objects like acorns, apes, and aliens. Use pictures, stickers, or real-life objects.
Letter A worksheets for kindergarten dive deeper into letter recognition and proper letter formation. Activities involve tracing uppercase and lowercase letters A and identifying words that begin with ‘A.’ Introduce phonemic awareness by including activities focusing on the letter A sound and linking it to words and natural objects.
While preschool letter A worksheets lay the groundwork for letter introduction and basic fine motor skills, kindergarten letter A worksheets take a more comprehensive approach, going deeper into letter recognition, phonics, and proper letter formation to prepare students for more advanced literacy activities.
Many children start learning the letters of the alphabet by singing the “ABC” song. Although they can sing the letters in order, this does not automatically translate to recognizing the appearance of each letter, either individually or within a word. Therefore, children need opportunities that will allow them to work with letters and become familiar with their physical characteristics.
When teaching the letter “a,” it’s helpful to have it displayed so children can refer to it. Consider hanging alphabet posters on the wall as well as having individual alphabet charts that students can use at their desk or table. Other activities include sorting magnetic letters or tiles (e.g., “Find all the letter a’s.”), making the letter with playdough, completing a letter hunt, and using flashcards.
It is helpful for children to learn a verbal pathway that will guide them when printing a letter. When teaching children how to print a lowercase “a,” model the printing while using the phrase, “Pull back, around, up, and down.” It is helpful to provide children with opportunities to trace the letter first before moving on to printing it independently.
Be explicit with teaching children where to begin their letter and the motion needed to complete it. Without specific instructions, children may learn to print letters in inefficient ways, which slows down their writing. Learning the proper letter formation from the beginning is preferred because it can be difficult to unlearn bad habits. As well, once printing letters becomes automatic, children can devote more attention to the thought processes necessary to create their content.
To teach the uppercase “A,” model the motion while using the phrase, “Slant down, slant down, across.”
There are many ways children can practice printing letters beyond traditional paper and pencil tasks. They can practice the proper motions using salt or sand trays, finger paint, whiteboard markers, and even juggling scarves.
When teaching children the sounds that letters make, relate the letters to familiar items that begin with the sound. For the letter “a,” the short vowel sound can be heard in words like “apple,” “astronaut,” and “alligator.” The long vowel sound can be heard in words like “acorn,” “ape,” and “alien.” Pair these words with a picture to help children learn the sound an “a” makes. Consider having children fill a block letter “a” with pictures of the words.
Provide children with further opportunities to learn letter sounds by matching the beginning sound to pictures. (e.g., Match the letter “a” to an axe.) or by coloring pictures of objects that begin with the correct sound. (e.g., Color the apple. Do not color the ball.) Children could also make alphabet books to refer to with each page showing a letter and an item to represent the sound.
Letter A Worksheets & Printables
The letter A mini-book is an exceptional activity for recognizing letter A, beginning sound, and tracing the lowercase letter A. Great for Preschool and Kindergarten.
Use these printable letter A banners to introduce the letter of the week, practice the correct letter A formation, and decorate your classroom wall.
Use this letter A printable poster to teach the correct letter formation from the beginning. The poster has animals starting this letter: alligator and anteater.
This activity is great for kids who are learning to read letter A. Kids read and stamp the letter A that was spun. Great for literacy centers to practice letter A.
This letter A printable book is excellent for learning animals and practice handwriting skills. Kids are encouraged to color and write the name of each animal.
With this worksheet, kids learn to read, trace and build the word LEG. Kids cut out cards and the bottom of the page and paste the letters to make a word.
This letter A recognition worksheet gives preschool and kindergarten kids practice in matching uppercase and lowercase letters, and vice versa.
This Letter A worksheet is an easy, no-prep way to listen for beginning sound A in words: apple, alligator, astronaut, axe, angel, apron, acorn, alien.
These alphabet letter A Cards build handwriting confidence by teaching the correct letter formation guidelines from the very beginning.
A cute letter a animal poster is a great choice to decorate your classroom and create an entertaining learning environment.
On this letter A page, kids work on their letter A sound identification skills. Kids practice the initial sound A by matching pictures with the letter.
With this activity, kids practice letter case differentiation skills. Cut and paste uppercase letter A cards upstairs and lowercase letter A cards downstairs.
This letter A poster promotes the recognition of the letter A, and helps students remember how to form the letter A. Great for Preschool and Kindergarten kids.
With these beginning sound A clip cards, children learn to identify the beginning sound A with hands-on practice strengthening fine motor skills.
With this Letter A mini-book, preschool and kindergarten age children work on beginning sound A, improve their phonics skills, and work on early literacy skills.
With this letter A crown, kids practice uppercase and lowercase letter A formation and identify four pictures that begin with the letter A sound.
Your students will enjoy this printable alphabet letter A worksheet. Each poster has an image: apple, alligator, astronaut, axe, angel, apron, acorn, alien.
Help your children learn the alphabet and develop a solid foundation for reading with this letter A flipbook. It is a great activity to introduce or review the letter A.
Do a dot letter A page is an engaging activity your kids will love to play. Use various things to fill the dots and practice letter recognition skills.
Kids will have fun while mastering the letter A recognition skills. This workbook includes eight hands-on activities and eight classroom posters that your kids will love.
With this hands-on activity, kids cut out and paste images that start with the letter A inside the house. Great for literacy centers and promoting phonics skills!
This lowercase letter A printable template is a comprehensive resource that helps kindergarten kids identify the letter A and its sound.
This printable is great for introducing words that start with A for kindergarten kids: alligator, axe, apricot, ask, alley, acorn, ate, apron, agent, and more.
With this activity, kids help the alien to find his letters by circling the upper and lower case letters A. Kids work on letter A recognition and discrimination skills.
Using markers or crayons, kids help the angel find the acorn by coloring the boxes following the pattern A-a-A-a. Letter A is exceptional for kindergarten kids.
Kids will have fun while mastering the letter A beginning sound skills. This workbook includes eleven hands-on activities and worksheets and one classroom poster that your kids will love.
Working on letter recognition skills kindergarten students find and color all lowercase letters A. After, they can color the apple at the bottom of the page!
With this beginning letter A worksheet, children strengthen their reading, writing, and phonics skills by performing three activities.
Get 50% OFF Your First Year of Premium Membership! Dismiss
Join PrimaryLearning.Org for Free Access
By clicking 'Create Account' above, I agree that I have read and agree to PrimaryLearning.Org's Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Members receive PrimaryLearning.Org emails. You can unsubscribe anytime.