This free Letter T worksheet helps preschool and kindergarten students practice letter recognition, tracing, and phonics with a fun “T is for Tree” activity.

Download your free worksheet below:
Skills Covered:
Letter recognition
Letter formation
Beginning sounds
Fine motor skills
Why Learning the Letter T Matters
Learning the letter T helps children build important early reading and writing skills. As preschoolers practice tracing and recognizing the letter T, they begin connecting letters with sounds and strengthening alphabet knowledge.
Children practicing the letter T are strengthening:
Letter recognition
Beginning sound awareness
Fine motor development
Pencil control
Hand-eye coordination
Early reading readiness
The word “tree” begins with the /t/ sound that children also hear in words such as tiger, train, and turtle.
Parent and Teacher Tips
Say the letter name and sound aloud while your child traces.
Practice saying “T says /t/” together.
Point to uppercase T and lowercase t.
Talk about trees your child sees outside.
Encourage effort rather than perfect handwriting.
Allow finger tracing before pencil tracing if needed.
Keep learning playful and positive.
Discuss how trees change during different seasons.
Questions to Ask Your Child
What letter are we learning today?
What sound does the letter T make?
What parts does a tree have?
Why are trees important?
What animals live in trees?
Can you think of another word that starts with T?
Fun Facts About Trees
Trees have roots, trunks, branches, and leaves.
Some trees can live for hundreds or even thousands of years.
Trees help clean the air and produce oxygen.
Many animals use trees as homes and shelters.
You can sometimes tell a tree’s age by counting growth rings inside its trunk.
Practice Beyond the Worksheet
Try these activities after completing the worksheet:
Go outside and observe different trees.
Draw and color a tree.
Build the letter T using playdough.
Read a nature book together.
Look through books or magazines and circle the letter T.
Collect leaves and sort them by shape or size.
Create a tree picture showing roots, trunk, branches, and leaves.
Related Concepts
After practicing the letter T, children can continue learning:
Beginning sounds
Alphabet recognition
Uppercase and lowercase letters
Plant vocabulary
Nature observation skills
Animal habitats
Seasons
Pre-writing skills
Fine motor development
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