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Rewriting Sentences with Capital Letters Worksheets

Ages 3-6 · 2 worksheets · 2 total pages · Free previews · Print-ready PDFs

Free printable rewriting sentences with capital letters worksheets for kindergarten students (Ages 3-6). Part of our capital letters capitalization collection. All worksheets are aligned to Common Core standards.

Rewriting Sentences with Capital Letters worksheet preview

Preview of Rewriting Sentences with Capital Letters - Friendly Butterfly. 2 variations available.

All Rewriting Sentences with Capital Letters Worksheets

Worksheet Details

GradeKindergarten
SubjectGrammar & Writing
TopicCapitalization
StandardL.1.2.A
Pages2 pages
DifficultyMedium

FAQ

What grade level are these capital letters worksheets for?

These capital letters worksheets are designed for Kindergarten students (Ages 3-6). Print any one in the set for targeted practice, or download them together as a packet.

Can I use these for homeschool or the classroom?

Yes. These worksheets work for homeschool, classroom, and tutoring. Use them as a morning warm-up, an independent center activity, or a fast-finisher task.

When should preschoolers start learning about capital letters?

Most preschoolers are ready to learn about capital letters between ages 3 and 4, starting with the capital letter that begins their own name. At the kindergarten level, capitalization instruction focuses on recognition rather than formal rules. Children should learn that the first letter of their name is always a capital letter and begin noticing that sentences in books start with a big letter. This early exposure aligns with CCSS L.K.2a, which kindergarteners will formalize by capitalizing the first word in a sentence. Worksheets that ask children to circle the capital letter at the start of their name or trace capital letters alongside lowercase versions build foundational letter awareness. Keep practice sessions short and playful, using colorful worksheets with familiar images to maintain engagement and build positive associations with writing conventions.

What capital letters should a kindergarten student recognize?

kindergarten students should focus on recognizing the capital letters in their own name first, then gradually expand to all 26 uppercase letters. Research shows that children learn uppercase letters before lowercase because uppercase forms are more visually distinct from one another. By the end of kindergarten, many children can identify 15 to 20 uppercase letters, though expectations vary by program. Printable worksheets that pair uppercase letters with pictures of familiar objects (A for apple, B for ball) reinforce letter-sound connections while building capital letter recognition. Activities like matching uppercase to lowercase letter cards and tracing large capital letters with crayons help develop both recognition and fine motor skills simultaneously. Consistent daily exposure through environmental print, alphabet books, and structured worksheet practice builds strong letter knowledge heading into kindergarten.

How can worksheets help preschoolers learn capitalization?

Worksheets support capitalization learning by providing structured, repeated exposure to uppercase letter forms in a format young children can engage with independently or with minimal guidance. Effective kindergarten capitalization worksheets include letter tracing activities with directional arrows, circle-the-capital-letter games embedded in simple sentences, and matching exercises that connect uppercase letters to their lowercase partners. Look for worksheets that use large print, dotted guidelines for tracing, and appealing illustrations to keep preschoolers motivated. The best worksheets progress from simple recognition tasks (find the capital A) to early application tasks (circle the big letter that starts the sentence). Pairing worksheet practice with hands-on activities like building capital letters with playdough or stamping them with letter stamps creates a multi-sensory learning experience that strengthens retention and prepares children for CCSS L.K.2a expectations in kindergarten.

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