Alphabet Activities & FREE Worksheets for Kids: Letters P-T

Hello and welcome to the ALPHABET ACTIVITIES post for letters P through T!

Like all of our previous alphabet activity pages, you’ll find letter-themed meal ideas, letter-shaped construction paper crafts, letter sorting activities, free printable worksheets, and so much more!

If you haven’t been to the ALPHABET ACTIVITIES PAGE yet, be sure to check that out in order to see our past alphabet activities and worksheets.

Welcome to LETTER P DAY!

First off, let’s start with a few suggestions of fun food you can make or incorporate into meals:

Here are a few activities you may want to try:

  • Letter Shape Construction Paper Craft: Make a puppy, penguin, panda, or pig out of pieces of paper scraps in the shape of a P. (See past alphabet activities for inspiration and examples, such as D is for Dragon.)
  • Letter Sorting Craft: Cut out 2 pelicans (a pair of them) and sort onto them capital and lowercase letter Ps that have been cut out in the shape of tiny fish. You could also cut out 2 pencils out of construction paper and sort letters onto them. (You can print capital and lowercase letters in a simple font like Arial, or you can draw them neatly. See this example for D is for Dolphins.)
  • Draw a parrot or peacock and have your Little glue feathers to it.
  • Create a phantom (ghost) out of white chalk on black construction paper. (Which will look kind of like these Valentine Chalkboard Hearts.)
  • Walk a pirate plank by drawing one in chalk on the sidewalk that leads to some grass the Little can jump into, or by shaping one out of painter’s tape that leads to a small ball pit or mini trampoline.
  • Do some finger painting by painting with your palms.

Now for the free worksheets! To get them, simply click on the links listed below this preview:

Welcome to LETTER Q DAY!

Here are a few suggestions of fun food you can make or incorporate into meals:

  • Quiche
  • Quaker Oats (oatmeal)
  • Quinoa
  • Queso Fresco
  • Quark (type of cheese that’s easier to find in Europe than the US)
  • Quarter Pounder (or make your own burger and give it the McD name)
  • Quesadillas
  • Quail
  • Quick Bread
  • Quince Tart

Here are a few activities you may want to try:

  • Letter Shape Construction Paper Craft: Create a queen, quokka, or quilt out of paper pieces and assemble into the shape of a Q.
  • Letter Sorting Craft: draw or cut out 2 quails or quartz crystals, and sort cut-out capital and lowercase Qs onto them.
  • Play a game of going from one room to another in your house quietly and quickly.
  • Create a quiz out of some of the letters you’ve already learned by holding up letters (possibly puzzle pieces) and have your Little call them out.
  • Make a quilt out of construction paper. Cut pieces of different colored paper into 4 squares or rectangles and punch holes around the outside of the shape. Use yarn to “sew” them together into a quilt.
  • Go on a quest. Perhaps make a scavenger hunt for items in your own kitchen or yard. You can make a map ahead of time to help with the quest.

Now for the free worksheets! To get them, simply click on the links listed below this preview:

Welcome to LETTER R DAY!

Here are a few suggestions of fun food you can make or incorporate into meals:

  • Raspberries
  • Raisins
  • Red Peppers
  • Romaine Lettuce
  • Ranch Dressing
  • Ravioli
  • Ratatouille
  • Risotto
  • Rice
  • Ramen
  • Rigatoni
  • Red Potatoes
  • Red Cabbage
  • Reuben Sandwich
  • Ribs
  • Rice Pudding
  • Red Velvet Cake
  • Root Beer Float
  • Rice Krispie Treats
  • anything Raw or Roasted

Here are a few activities you may want to try:

  • Letter Shape Construction Paper Craft: Make a raccoon, red panda, rattlesnake, or reindeer out of pieces of paper into the shape of a big R.
  • Letter Sorting Craft: Make 2 robots, rockets, rhinos, rays (stingrays or manta rays), rabbits, or rats and sort out some cut-out capital and lowercase Rs onto them.
  • Hold a race where you run, preferably outdoors.
  • Rotate the R. Put out a capital and lowercase R, whether printed on paper or from a puzzle, and when you call out the word “rotate,” your Little can rotate them. Like: “Rotate BIG R,” then “Rotate LITTLE R!”
  • Read your favorite books. Try to find a rhyming book to read.
  • Create a recipe with your favorite foods. Or follow one of your favorite recipes from a cookbook.
  • Use a ruler to measure different objects around your house, especially if you can find objects that start with the letter R (like a rubber ball or rope) or are red.

Now for the free worksheets! To get them, simply click on the links listed below this preview:

Welcome to LETTER S DAY!

Here are a few suggestions of fun food you can make or incorporate into meals:

Here are a few activities you may want to try:

  • Letter Shape Construction Paper Craft: Make a snake, squirrel, or swan out of paper pieces into the shape of a letter S.
  • Letter Sorting Craft: Draw or cut out two swords, sharks, snails, or stegosaurus and sort onto them capital and lowercase letter S’s that you’ve printed or drawn.
  • Play Simon Says.
  • Sing your favorite songs.
  • Learn to skip stones.
  • Maybe skip while you sing.
  • Make Speckled Shell Stegosaurus hard-boiled eggs, like these Frozen Cracked Ice Eggs.
  • Slither like a snake on the ground. You could trace out a path with painter’s tape in the shape of a letter S if you like. This will be easier on a wood or tile floor. Beware of rug burns on carpet!
  • Make Snail Slime, kind of like the Green Goo and Green Glitter Goo from Letter G Day.
  • Play with a Slinky, and shape it into a letter S.
  • Play soccer, perhaps by trying to kick the soccer ball into an area marked by a letter S sign.
  • Search for shells at the beach.

Now for the free worksheets! To get them, simply click on the links listed below this preview:

Welcome to LETTER T DAY!

Here are a few suggestions of fun food you can make or incorporate into meals:

  • Tomatoes
  • Tamarillos
  • Tangerines
  • Tangelos
  • Toast (perhaps this Tropical French Toast or this Teddy Bear Toast)
  • Tortilla
  • Tacos
  • Teriyaki
  • Tempura
  • Tofu
  • Tabbouleh
  • Turkey (roasted, sure, but what about turkey cookies?)
  • Trout or Tuna
  • Tagliatelle (a type of pasta)
  • Texas Toast (my kid’s favorite garlic bread)
  • Tatar tots
  • Tabasco sauce
  • Tarts
  • Truffles (one of my favorites is this Ginger Cookie Truffle)
  • Tiramisu
  • Taffy
  • Toffee

Here are a few activities you may want to try:

  • Letter Shape Construction Paper Craft: make a tyrannosaurus rex, tiger, turtle, or train out of paper pieces into the shape of a letter T.
  • Letter Sorting Craft: print, draw, or cut out two trees, teapots, tomatoes, or tacos and sort onto them capital and lowercase letter Ts.
  • Put on some temporary tattoos.
  • Play toss with a tennis ball.
  • Do some of your alphabet activities inside of a blanket tent in your living room, or a camping tent outside.
  • Set out some letters, such as from a puzzle, and have your Little touch them as you call them out. Like, “touch the T! Now touch the G!”
  • Teach each other how to do something new, like signing the letter T in ASL or BSL, or how to do the yoga pose for turtle.
  • Tap out a thunder tune by mimicking the sound of thunder on a drum or upside down pots and bowls.
  • Have a tea party along with some alphabet cookies, especially cookies shaped like the letter T.
  • Tear up some paper to create a letter T by gluing the pieces onto some construction paper.
  • Create a tower out of cardboard boxes or blocks. Make pathways to drive toy trucks between the towers. Or make the tower in the shape of a T and drive the toy trucks around it.

Now for the free worksheets! To get them, simply click on the links listed below this preview:

That’s it for today!

Be sure to subscribe so you get a notification of my next post.

Don’t forget to Pin the images on this page to Pinterest to help you find it again!

Check out the ALPHABET ACTIVITIES PAGE to find a list of all of the letters.

And please share with me on Facebook if you have any photos of you and your Littles enjoying your alphabet days!

Have fun!

Alphabet Activities & FREE Worksheets for Kids: Letters K-O

Hello and welcome to the ALPHABET ACTIVITIES post for letters K through O!

If you haven’t been to the ALPHABET ACTIVITIES PAGE yet, be sure to check that out.

Our “Alphabet Day” suggestions include food and meal ideas to incorporate, crafts, physical activities, and the free printable worksheets that I created. Each letter has its own section!

Like all of our previous alphabet activity pages, you’ll find letter-themed meal ideas, letter-shaped construction paper crafts, letter sorting activities, free printable worksheets, and so much more!

And while I said in my announcement email that I lost most of my photos, I do have a few, so I’ll include them here.

Welcome to LETTER K DAY!

First off, let’s start with a few suggestions of fun food you can make or incorporate into meals:

  • Kalamata Olives
  • Ketchup
  • Kale
  • Kefir
  • Kimchi
  • Kabobs
  • Kiwi
  • KitKats
  • Key Lime Pie

And here are a few activities you may want to try:

  • Letter Shape Construction Paper Craft: make a kitten or koala or king out of paper pieces glued together to make a giant K shape. (See past alphabet activities for inspiration and examples, such as D is for Dragon.)
  • Letter Sorting Craft: draw or cut out 2 kites or keys and cut out capital and lowercase Ks to sort onto the kites. (You can print capital and lowercase letters in a simple font like Arial, or you can draw them neatly. See this example for D is for Dolphins.)
  • Knit: make K shapes with yarn or knitting needles. Possibly teach the child how to knit.
  • Knock: draw a capital and lowercase K and have them knock on the “big” or “little” K, or you can write out a few words that start with K instead for older kids to knock on when you say them out loud, like know, keep, kind, kitty.
  • Kick or Keep: put out a line of balls or other objects, have the child stand behind each one and announce “kick” or “keep,” so that they kick the object away or leave it alone. This is probably best done outside. You could also just Kick the balls. Taping a cut out K onto them gives the Littles somewhere to aim.
  • Knight: dress up as a knight in shining armor.
  • Tell Knock, Knock jokes.

(Forgive any blurriness in the photos – these were taken waaaay back when on one of my first digital cameras, and the previews looked pretty good on those one-inch screens!)

Now for the free worksheets!

To get them, simply click on the links listed below this preview:

Most of the K worksheets are about fine motor control, but the Kangaroo and Kin one includes pictures you can cut out so that they can be sorted by size.

Welcome to LETTER L DAY!

Here are a few suggestions of fun food you can make or incorporate into meals:

  • Lemons (possibly these easy lemon cookies)
  • Lemonade
  • Limes
  • Leeks
  • Lettuce
  • Lasange
  • Lamb
  • Linguine
  • Lentils (possibly in soup)
  • Lavender (possibly in tea or shortbread cookies)
  • Lychee
  • Ladyfingers
  • Leaf-shaped cookies

Here are a few activities you may want to try:

  • Letter Shape Construction Paper Craft: make a lemur, lobster, lizard, lion, or leopard out of paper pieces glued together into a giant L shape.
  • Letter Sorting Craft: Ladybugs on Leaves or water drops on Lighthouses– cut out small red bugs (or just red circles) and put a big “L” or small “l” on each. Cut out 2 leaves and label each with a big “L” or small “l” so they can sort the ladybugs (or ladybirds, depending on your location). Or cut out or draw some lighthouses and use letters on blue paper to sort the “water drops” onto the correct lighthouse. Or both. Really, you can do as many of these as you have time to make.
  • Make Lemon-scented homemade play dough
  • Leap like a lemur or a lion, possibly from L to L after drawing out Ls with chalk on the ground
  • Lick a lollipop
  • Make lemonade.
  • Laugh at each other’s jokes
  • Do a Leaf Rubbing. Place some leaves on a hard surface, cover them with paper, and rub over them with an unwrapped crayon.
  • Launch game: set up a line of toy cars and “launch” them on command (3,2,1 … launch!) at a target, possibly an “L” cut out of paper.
  • Any type of lace craft. I let my Littles just paint on the lace as a sensory activity and to explore the patterns it would make.

Now for the free worksheets!

To get them, simply click on the links listed below this preview:

For the Lace worksheet, I found some cheap lace at the dollar store to let them cut up and play with as well as glue down on the paper. And for the Lush Llamas, they pulled apart some cotton balls to glue down. These were great for sensory play.

Welcome to LETTER M DAY!

Here are a few suggestions of fun food you can make or incorporate into meals:

  • Mango
  • Molasses
  • Maple Syrup (great with pancakes – or maybe mango french toast!)
  • Milk
  • Mozzarella cheese (possibly in some Manicotti)
  • Macaroni
  • Meatloaf
  • Moussaka
  • Mushrooms
  • Mustard
  • Mackerel or Mahi-Mahi
  • Meringue
  • Macaroons
  • Mints
  • M&Ms (see the printables below)

Here are a few activities you may want to try:

  • Letter Shape Construction Paper Craft: make a monkey, moose, mouse or macaw out of paper pieces in the shape of a giant M.
  • Letter Sorting Craft: Mud! Cut out two uneven circles of brown paper to represent mud puddles, and cut out capital “M” and lowercase “m” pieces for your child to sort into the two puddles. Or cut out 2 of the above-mentioned animals and sort the letters onto those. Sooo many options!
  • Macaroni craft: make something out of gluing dried pasta (macaroni) to paper in the shapes of a giant “M,” or make a necklace out of stringing dried pasta onto yarn. Consider coloring the macaroni with markers.
  • Map Making: make a map of your house or backyard or bedroom. Any type of map will do – simple squares and squiggles are great. For some more examples, see this “mystery map” we made.
  • Practice Mindfulness with Meditation.
  • Go on a Merry March! Create a giant “M” out of painters tape if indoors or out of chalk if outdoors, and march back and forth over that. (Kind of like our Footprint activity.)
  • M is for Music and Mountains under the Moon.” Okay, sometimes I just picked a lot of words that start with the letter (especially if they’re relatively easy to cut out) and let my Littles make their own … wait for it … mural. (See photo below.)

Now for the free worksheets!

To get them, simply click on the links listed below this preview:

Two of these worksheets require M&M or very similar candy. And for the Marshmallow activity, I did provide a bag of mini marshmallows. You could substitute dot markers for marshmallows, I suppose, but there are plenty of worksheets without any candy if you prefer to avoid it.

Welcome to LETTER N DAY!

Here are a few suggestions of fun food you can make or incorporate into meals:

Here are a few activities you may want to try:

  • Letter Shape Construction Paper Craft: make a newt or narwhal out of paper pieces in the shape of an N.
  • Letter Sorting Craft: cut out 2 pieces of paper in the shapes of nachos or novels or bird nests, and cut out capital “N” and lowercase “n” pieces to sort onto them.
  • Take a nap.
  • Navigate Nature by taking a hike. Perhaps in your neighborhood.
  • Make your name out of dried noodles. You can glue them to a piece of construction paper, or just sculpt it for fun.
  • You can also make a Noodle Necklace out of dried pasta and yarn. (There’s a repeating theme here with the macaroni and pasta and noodles, but what can I say? I’m Italian. I always have it in the house.)
  • If it happens to be winter, you could sing Noel.

Now for the free worksheets!

To get them, simply click on the links listed below this preview:

These N worksheets include one that has the child place nickles on the circle, to help with motor control, but you could also fill those in with dot markers, of course. For the Newspaper one, we ripped up tiny pieces to then glue into the N shape. Always fun to make a mess. For the Numbers worksheet, I happened to find number-shape stickers at my dollar store – don’t forget to check the mail and office supply section!

Welcome to LETTER O DAY!

Here are a few suggestions of fun food you can make or incorporate into meals:

  • Oatmeal
  • Oat Milk
  • Oranges
  • Omelet
  • Onigiri
  • Okra
  • Orzo
  • Onions
  • Onion Rings
  • Orange Chicken
  • Octopus-shaped Hot Dogs or Biscuits
  • Olive Oil Cake
  • Oatmeal Cookies (like these Lemon Oatmeal Cookies)
  • Oreos

Here are a few activities you may want to try:

  • Letter Shape Construction Paper Craft: make an octopus, owl, orangutan, ostrich, or otter out of paper pieces into the shape of an O.
  • Letter Sorting Craft: cut out 2 paper orchids, overcoats, oysters, or oak trees and cut out capital “O” and lowercase “o” pieces to sort onto them.
  • If you live by a beach, visit the ocean.
  • Observe what happens when you drip olive oil into a bowl of water with a dropper.
  • Make some more of the Green Goo from Letter G Day and let is Ooze through your fingers.
  • Learn outdoors by moving your “officeoutside.
  • Make a flower out of onion paper peels.
  • Do an Ocean sensory play bath. This is one of my all-time favorite activities, and the Littles loooved it. If you don’t have a tub, you could always make a sensory bin inside a bucket or container.

Now for the free worksheets!

To get them, simply click on the links listed below this preview:

For the Olympics worksheets, you can cut out the rings from the 2nd worksheet and let your Little match them with the 1st worksheet. For the Ocean worksheet, I happened to find animal-shaped stickers of ocean dwellers. Your Little, as always, could draw their own animals instead, or perhaps cut some photos out of an old magazine.

That’s it for today!

Be sure to subscribe so you get a notification of my next post.

And thank you SO MUCH for your patience as I took (ahem) a while to finish posting these worksheets.

Don’t forget to Pin the images on this page to Pinterest to help you find it again!

Check out the ALPHABET ACTIVITIES PAGE to find a list of all of the letters.

Please share with me on Facebook if you have any photos of you and your Littles enjoying your alphabet days!

Have fun!