ClassWeekly

Preschool & Kindergarten Worksheets

Ages 3-6 · Math, Reading, Writing, and Grammar

Tracing Letters - The Letter F
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Tracing Letters - The Letter G
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Tracing Letters - The Letter H
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Tracing Letters - The Letter I
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Tracing Letters - The Letter J
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Tracing Letters - The Letter K
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Tracing Letters - The Letter L
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Tracing Letters - The Letter M
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Tracing Letters - The Letter N
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Tracing Letters - The Letter O
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Tracing Letters - The Letter P
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Tracing Letters - The Letter Q
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Tracing Letters - The Letter R
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Tracing Letters - The Letter S
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Tracing Letters - The Letter T
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Tracing Letters - The Letter U
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Tracing Letters - The Letter V
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Tracing Letters - The Letter W
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Tracing Letters - The Letter X
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Tracing Letters - The Letter Y
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Tracing Letters - The Letter Z
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Farm Animals Poster (24x36)
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Pre-K Dolch Sight Words List
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What kindergarten worksheets are available on ClassWeekly?

Kindergarten worksheets on ClassWeekly cover math, reading, writing, and grammar for children ages 4-6. Every worksheet targets a specific Common Core kindergarten standard and is built for short practice sessions of 5 to 15 minutes. The library covers counting, letter formation, phonics, sight words, and early sentence writing.

Kindergarten is where school starts to feel like school. Your kid is learning to recognize letters and numbers, count to 100, write their name, and read a few sight words. ClassWeekly groups Preschool and Kindergarten into one hub because the skills overlap heavily. A 4-year-old tracing letter A and a 5-year-old writing A from memory are doing the same skill at different points on the curve.

The kindergarten library covers four areas: math (counting, number recognition, addition within 10, shapes, sorting), reading (alphabet, beginning phonics, sight words, simple decoding), writing (letter formation, name writing, early sentence tracing), and grammar (basic capitalization, ending punctuation, simple sentence structure). Every page is built for short attention spans and small hands. Big numbers, big letters, big answer boxes.

Use these worksheets in 5 to 10 minute bursts. Younger kids fade fast. If your kid loses focus halfway through a page, that's normal. Stop, come back later. Doing one page well is better than three pages messily.

Every worksheet aligns to a specific Common Core kindergarten standard. The standard is printed on the page so you can see exactly what's being practiced. If your school uses a different curriculum, the underlying skill (counting, letter formation, etc.) usually maps over.

If your kid is heading into 1st grade and you want to keep the muscle warm over summer, this page is also a fit. Pick the worksheets they liked, do two or three a week.

Last reviewed: April 2026

Common questions about kindergarten worksheets

What is ClassWeekly?

ClassWeekly offers free worksheets and printable learning resources for kids in preschool to grade 5. All worksheets are aligned to Common Core standards and designed by educators. Become a member to access the full library and download unlimited PDFs.