Designed by
Grab all of my kids letter W tracing worksheets here.
Each individual printable worksheet is free and you can select from the variations below. These worksheets can help children learn the alphabet and build fine motor skills.
The variations below include upper case and lower case ‘Ww’ versions for a variety of practice as well as common W words for early learners including water, walk, and wash.
All worksheets are designed to be printed on A4 paper. Make sure you select “shrink to fit” in order to ensure best quality output from your printer.
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.
Visitors Like You Also Wanted…
Find Other Letter Tracing Worksheets Here:
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Free Letter W Tracing Worksheets
Designed by Chris
Designed for very beginners, this page contains bubble letters for uppercase and lowercase W, followed by tracing of the word whale. It also has a full-color cartoon image of an whale.
Designed by Chris
Children need to learn that letters fit within groups to form words. Here, students can practice writing w-words they are most likely familiar with: whale and watermelon.
Designed by Chris
This version introduces sentence writing. By practicing the letter in the context of sentences, students can learn that letters form words, and words form sentences. To this end, I created a sentence with lots of ‘w’ letters in it: “I went whale watching on Wednesday.”
Designed by Chris
This version focuses in on practicing one of the most common sight words starting with our focus letter. Students see a model of the word at the start of each line, then practice tracing it twice per line along six lines.
Designed by Chris
This simple practice worksheet offers beginners the chance to trace the letters inside large bubble writing, and then they can practice tracing the whale and writing the simple sentence: “W is for whale.”
Designed by Chris
This version is similar to the previous, but may be a follow-up option for a subsequent day when your child needs more letter tracing practice. The dot-tracing whale will also help children to refine their fine motor skills, so spaced repetition of this task is a positive.
Designed by Chris
This version places uppercase and lowercase Ww letters alongside one another. The idea is to associate the two letters through proximal placement – students are encouraged to recognize these two letter forms as having the same semantic meaning.
Designed by Chris
This piece has progression built into the one page – going from singular use of the letter, up to its uppercase, then placing them together. Finally, students practice a full word starting with w – water.
Designed by Chris
This version is all about practicing the individual letter multiple times, with the intention of developing muscle memory and fluency in both form and size. The horizontal handwriting lines are in place to help students to write the letter in a uniform size throughout.
Designed by Chris
In this version, we focus on short, common, and memorable words starting with our focus letter. The words are: water, walk, and wash. Students practice each word four times – and we’ve incorporated plenty of chances for uppercase and lowercase practice again.
Designed by Chris
This version is designed to help students take the step from tracing to individual practice. The horizontal handwriting lines are still there for scaffolding of sizing, with the idea that students develop the skill of maintaining uniform letter size in words and sentences, but they need to practice the letters independently.
The Next Worksheets you’ll Need
Visitors Like You Also Wanted…