15+ Letter Q Printables: Free & Easy Print!
Need some q-q-quality letter Q printables for your kindergarten children and preschoolers?
This printable pack will be a great addition to any letter of the week curriculum!
You will find tracing worksheets, do-a-dot maker pages, coloring pages, handwriting activities, and more.
Your younger children will learn all about letter formation, writing lowercase q & uppercase Q, the letter q sound, and letter recognition skills!
At the bottom of the page, you will find a link for an instant download to your letter q worksheets pdf.
Please limit these printable activities to homeschool, co-op, classroom, or personal use.
Check Out Your Free Letter Q Worksheets!
This letter Q coloring page is a great way to jump into all things letter Q.
Go through them with your kindergarten students and help them identify all the letter q words: queen, question, quill, quilt, quail, and quack.
If your child isn’t familiar with the question mark just yet, explain what it is used for and draw an example.
Also take some time to do a little history. Give a brief history of what quill pens were and how they were used. Consider watching a short youtube video or even making a quill pen as a fun letter Q craft!
How cool would it be to practice writing the letter Q with a q-q-quill pen?!
This letter Q tracing worksheet is just the thing to help your student learn how to write the lowercase letter Q and and uppercase letter Q.
Sit down and watch your child practice by tracing the dotted lines.
Just like with the letter P, it is important that they learn the correct order when writing this letter.
When it comes to capital letters, the capital letter Q is pretty straightforward. Draw the letter O and put a small line through it.
The lower case q is a little more tricky. Have your child draw an /a/ and then have them continue the line down into a little tail.
It should be just like letter /g/, but the “tail” goes the other way.
With repetition and time, your child will get the hang of it.
Once the tracing is mastered, your child is ready to ditch the dotted lines!
The top of the page still has example letters as a guide.
There are no step-by-step instructions with this worksheet, because I wanted you, as the parent or teacher, to set the standard.
Tell your child that they must write 2 letters on each line, 4 letters on each line, or whatever you think is best for them.
Some kids will delight in writing…but it could be a slog for others.
Hopefully, giving them a firm number will help either way.
If your student continues to struggle with remembering the correct way to write letter Q, consider doing something like spraying cheap shaving cream onto a cookie sheet and letting them use their finger (or paintbrush, etc.) to practice making /q/s.
That would definitely be the best way to make it memorable for both of you!
Do-a-dot pages time!
This first letter recognition worksheet is all about the capital letter Q!
Help your child dab (or color) every letter Q they can find so it will go back in the jar.
Encourage your child to use all different colors for the letter Q. The other uppercase letters should be left blank or they can all be the same color, such as red or black.
Dot markers are still needed for this letter recognition worksheet!
Help your child find the lowercase Q among all the other lowercase letters.
Yes, there are some letter /p/s on the sheet.
Remember the fun way to tell the difference from last week’s letter p worksheet pack.
Place a p and a q (use magnetic letters for more fun!) on either side of a drawing of a bed, and say you want some peace and quiet.
Definitely help your child as much as possible during these early stages. Learning at this age should be all about encouragement and fun, no stress.
****I know you might be wondering what in the world that little animal is. It’s called a quail!
Speaking of fun!
Break out your crayons for this fun coloring page!
Help your child go through all the pictures and see if they can hear the difference in the letter sounds.
Can they hear the difference between l-l-leaf, q-q-quail, and o-o-orange? Work with them to isolate that first sound and pick out all the Q words.
They should color: quail, quiver, quick, queen, and quiet.
What can your child remember about the letter Q so far?
They can draw any letter q word they’ve learned, or they can draw some of their own!
Be careful not to suggest words like quarter or quiche.
These are Q words that actually have a hard /k/ sound. With young kids, it is best to avoid confusion.
With time and a solid reading program, they will learn all the other rules and the many exceptions to the rules.
It’s what makes the English language fun, right?
Yay for alphabet books!
Your young children will have so much fun learning new q words, coloring, cutting, and piecing together their very own letter book.
Many of these will be new vocabulary words, so take the time to explain and learn a little more about quest, quill, and quiver.
This coloring page is such a fun way to finish nailing down the /kw/ sound!
Continue to work with your child to name each picture and isolate the first sound they hear.
They should eventually color quilt, quack, queen, quill, and question mark.
This L
letter q worksheet will provide extra practice with tracing for the child who needs it.
Which at this age, should probably be everybody.
If the writing seems too much, just do half of the sheet and come back to finish it later.
This final free letter q printable is a perfect capstone worksheet for your week!
Use it to review tracing, writing, drawing, and letter q words.
Doing the mazes looks like fun, but it is also a way to sharpen those fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination!
Click Here To Download Your Free Letter Q Worksheets!
Click the above image link/text link to get your free download of the letter Q worksheet packet in PDF format. No email address or other personal information is required.
Terms of Use: This printable worksheet packet is for homeschool, classroom, co-op, and personal use only. The Simple Homeschooler free printables are never for commercial use. Thank you!
I hope that you and your kids really enjoy the educational activities in these letter worksheets!
Everything from the coloring pages that teach initial letter sounds to the dot marker pages that teach letter identification – these great worksheets are packed with learning fun!
The tracing pages are also perfect for helping younger and older children nail down the tricky upper case and lowercase letter q.
****Don’t forget the hands-on activities I mentioned for helping your kids remember how to write them!
All of these sheets will slide nicely into homeschools, classrooms, reading programs, and literacy centers. So be sure to go to the download page and get your copy today!
As your child is learning the letters of the alphabet, I hope you continue to come back here for more free printable worksheets!
This blog has a packet for the whole alphabet!