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Grab all ten of my cursive letter G 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 ‘Gg’ versions for a variety of cursive writing practice activities as well as common G words for early learners to practice their cursive writing style.
The worksheets are provided roughly in order of difficulty, with students starting with individual letters, then stepping up to practicing full words, then finally writing the letter in the context of a full cursive sentence.
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 G Tracing Worksheets
Designed by Chris
This version is designed for students to experience progression in the one sheet: students start with lowercase letters, then uppercase, and then try them out in full but simple words: goat and goal.
Designed by Chris
This sheet is for sustained and focused practice on the lowercase g, helping students to develop muscle memory and fluency in doing the letter in a single stroke. Students practice the letter 60 times on the one sheet.
Designed by Chris
This version focuses on the capital G, which is the same as the non-cursive version. Students can use this to practice the letter and reinforce the knowledge that the capital version does not flick onto the next letter.
Designed by Chris
On this version, students practice the uppercase and lowercase letter side by side, helping to reinforce both forms of the same letter. The lowercase flick to the next letter should be practiced here. Students practice each letter 36 times over.
Designed by Chris
Once students have completed the individual letters, they can move onto practicing the letter within a full word. We’re starting here with the simple word “goat”, focusing on the flow from the g onto the o without lifting the pen.
Designed by Chris
Our second focus word containing the letter g is “goal”, with students again demonstrating transition from g to o. I’ve provided horizontal tracing lines for this version, which can help students to maintain consistent size and shape for their letters.
Designed by Chris
Our third word is “girl”, where we can do a new transition from g to i, then continue the word with an i to r then r to l transition. Students can color-in the image of the girl at the top of the sheet once they have finsihed!
Designed by Chris
Having completed the individual words in the previous three worksheets, this one combines all three of the words into one sheet, with students getting to write 24 words across this sheet.
Designed by Chris
Having completed individual words, students can now move onto full sentences to write the letters within the context of writing. This first version repeats the phrase “The girl got a goat as a gift” thee times.
Designed by Chris
This final version offers another chance to write in a full sentence, this time in the context of a g-themed story: “The gentle goat grazed gracefully in the green, grassy garden.”