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Grab all ten of my cursive letter E tracing worksheets here. Each individual printable worksheet is free and can help children to learn to write in cursive and build muscle memory in writing.
The variations below include upper case and lower case ‘Ee’ versions for a variety of cursive writing practice activities as well as common E words for early learners to practice their cursive writing style.
License and Terms of Use: All printables are provided for non-commercial personal and classroom use only, not for resale or distribution. All rights reserved.
Free Cursive Letter E Tracing Worksheets
Designed by Chris
This version demonstrates progression from the individual letter through to words, with students focusing on connecting the lowercase e onto the following letter, while understanding that the uppercase E does not connect.
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This sheet is for students to develop muscle memory with the lowercase e, practicing it enough times for rote learning to reinforce the letter in a student’s mind. Students practice the letter 66 times across this one page.
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This is a page for practicing the uppercase E. Students can come to learn the simplest stroke structure for writing the letter, develop muscle memory and experience with the letter, and come to understand that the capital letter does not have a flick to move onto the next letter.
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In this version, students practice both the capital and lowercase versions of the letter. This is a good option to combine the two previous tasks into one simple lesson, with 48 chances to practice each letter. Students can also learn the relative size of each letter to the other.
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Having mastered the writing of the individual letters, students can now practice linking them into full words. Our first practice word is “egg”. Students write the full word without lifting the pen, practicing the flow from the e to the g throughout.
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Our next full word is ear, where students practice linking e to a, then a to r. Students can practice both the lowercase e link, as well as the broken connection between the capital E and the a.
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Our third and final practice word is “eel”, which is a great word for practicing cursive e because it has lead-in and lead-out of the target letter.
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On this sheet, students demonstrate mastery of all three of our focus words: egg, ear, and eel. Students get the chance to write 32 e-words on the page.
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After completing individual words, we move onto cursive sentence practice, where students practice writing the simple sentence “The eel ate the egg” six times over.
Designed by Chris
Our final worksheet is a culmination of the skills developed throughout the other sheets, where students practice a complete sentence with plenty of chances to use the cursive e in context. The sentence is: “Eager elephants eagerly explored every edge of the enchanted evergreen forest.”