Help your preschool child continue building early reading skills with this free Beginning Sounds Match worksheet. This alphabet activity helps students recognize the first sounds in words and connect those sounds with matching letters.
Children will look at each picture, say the word aloud, and draw a line to the letter that makes the beginning sound.

Download your free worksheet below:
What Children Will Practice
This worksheet supports:
✔ Beginning sound identification
✔ Alphabet recognition
✔ Letter-sound relationships
✔ Early phonics development
✔ Listening skills
✔ Vocabulary growth
✔ Pre-reading confidence
✔ Pencil control and fine motor skills
How To Use This Worksheet
Look at each picture.
Say the picture word carefully.
Listen for the sound at the beginning.
Find the letter that makes that sound.
Draw a line to the matching letter.
Why Beginning Sounds Are Important
Beginning sound practice helps children understand that letters and sounds work together to create words.
When preschool students can hear the first sound in a word and connect it to a letter, they are building important skills needed for reading, spelling, and writing.
Skills Covered
Beginning Sound Recognition
Students practice hearing and identifying the first sound in familiar words.
Letter Identification
Children recognize uppercase alphabet letters and connect them to sounds.
Early Phonics Skills
Students strengthen the connection between spoken sounds and printed letters.
Vocabulary Development
Children expand language skills by naming familiar pictures and objects.
Fine Motor Practice
Drawing matching lines gives students extra pencil control practice.
Learning Goals
After finishing this worksheet, students should be able to:
✔ Identify beginning sounds in words
✔ Recognize matching alphabet letters
✔ Connect pictures with letter sounds
✔ Understand basic phonics relationships
✔ Build confidence with early reading activities
Parent & Teacher Tips:
Make this activity more interactive:
• Say each picture name together.
• Stretch the beginning sound: “J-J-Jar.”
• Ask your child what letter makes that sound.
• Review the letters after completing the worksheet.
• Find more items around your home that start with the same letters.
Extend the Learning
Beginning Sound Search
Look around the house for objects that begin with J, O, V, W, and Q.
Alphabet Writing Practice
Practice writing the matching uppercase and lowercase letters.
Sound Sorting Activity
Sort toys, objects, or picture cards by their beginning sounds.
Create New Words
Think of more words that start with each letter sound.
Questions To Ask Children:
What picture do you see?
What is the first sound you hear?
Which letter makes that sound?
Can you find another word with the same beginning sound?
Which letter was easiest to match?
Answer Key

More Free Worksheets:
Building Strong Phonics Skills
Practicing beginning sounds gives children the foundation they need for reading success. These simple picture matching activities help preschool learners understand how letters and sounds connect before they begin reading words independently.
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