Kindergarten Prep Blog | How to Homeschool Preschool

Letter A Activities for Preschoolers: 10 Fun Ideas

Written by Kindergarten Prep Team | 12/27/25 3:52 PM

Looking for engaging ways to teach your preschooler the letter A?

You're in the right place!

This collection of hands-on letter A activities combines crafts, games, and sensory play to help your child recognize, write, and remember the letter A.

These activities are perfect for homeschool preschool families who want to make learning the alphabet fun and memorable. Each activity uses simple materials you already have at home and takes just minutes to set up. Whether your child is just starting to learn letters or needs more practice with letter recognition, these playful activities will keep them engaged while building essential pre-literacy skills.

10 Letter A Activities Your Preschooler Will Love

Want a Complete Week-Long Plan?

These Letter A activities are part of our comprehensive preschool curriculum, which includes weekly letter-specific lesson plans, additional activities, and structured learning across all developmental areas.

View Week 1 Curriculum →

Activity 1: Apple Print Letter Collage

⏱️ Prep Time: 5 minutes
 🎨 Materials: Apple, washable paint, large paper, letter A outline

This letter A craft is a must-try activity for preschoolers! Since apples start with the letter A, apple printing is the perfect way to create a memorable letter collage. Kids love the surprise of seeing the apple print pattern, and this activity naturally reinforces the connection between the letter A and its sound.

Activity 2: Dot Marker Letter Hunt

⏱️ Prep Time: 2 minutes
 🎨 Materials: Do-a-Dot markers (or bingo daubers), letter hunt printable

This is one of the quickest and most engaging letter recognition activities you can do! Kids get so excited when they find all the hidden letter A's on the page. The repetitive action of dotting each letter helps reinforce letter recognition while building fine motor control.

How to do it:

  1. Download and print our Letter A Hunt worksheet (or create your own by scattering uppercase and lowercase A's among other letters on a page).
  2. Give your child dot markers in their favorite colors.
  3. Ask them to find all the letter A's (both uppercase and lowercase) and place a dot on each one.
  4. For younger children, point to a letter A and say, "This is the letter A. Can you find more letters that look like this one?"
  5. Count how many letter A's they found when finished!

Extension: Use two different colors—one for uppercase A and one for lowercase a. This helps reinforce the difference between the two forms.

Learning benefit: Strengthens letter recognition, visual discrimination, and hand-eye coordination.

Activity 3: Letter A Search & Match Game

⏱️ Prep Time: 5 minutes
 🎨 Materials: Post-it notes, marker, two pieces of cardstock, tape

My kids are absolutely obsessed with this activity! Even though we play it for every letter, it never gets old. The element of hide-and-seek combined with learning makes this one of those activities where they'll ask to play it again and again. It's perfect for burning energy while learning.

How to do it:

  1. Draw a large uppercase A on one piece of cardstock and a lowercase a on another.
  2. Tape both papers to the wall at your child's eye level.
  3. Write uppercase A's and lowercase a's on 10-15 Post-it notes (mix them up).
  4. Hide the post-its around your living room, playroom, or classroom—stick them on furniture, under pillows, behind toys.
  5. Have your child search for the post-its. When they find one, they bring it to you.
  6. Ask them: "Is this an uppercase A or a lowercase a?" Then help them stick it on the matching letter on the wall.
  7. Once all post-its are found, hide them again and play another round!

Learning benefit: Teaches uppercase and lowercase letter recognition while incorporating movement and problem-solving.

Activity 4: Playdough Letter Formation

⏱️ Prep Time: 2 minutes
 🎨 Materials: Playdough (any color), letter A card or printable

Whenever I pull out the playdough, my kids play with it for at least half an hour. Since playdough is so engaging, it makes for a wonderful learning activity! This simple exercise helps children understand the shape and strokes of the letter A through hands-on manipulation.

How to do it:

  1. Roll out the playdough into long "snakes" (about pencil thickness).
  2. Show your child a letter A card or printable as a model.
  3. Guide them in forming the letter A: two lines that meet at a point on top, and one line across the middle.
  4. For younger children, draw a large letter A on paper and have them place the playdough snakes on top of the lines.
  5. Let them make the letter A several times, using different colors.
  6. Say the letter name and sound each time they complete it: "This is the letter A. It says /a/."

Extension: Once they've mastered uppercase A, try lowercase a. Or challenge them to make the letter A without looking at the model.

Learning benefit: Develops fine motor skills, muscle memory for letter formation, and tactile learning.

Activity 5: Alligator Sensory Bin

⏱️ Prep Time: 10 minutes
 🎨 Materials: Large bin, rice or dried beans, toy alligators, measuring cups, food coloring, scoops

A is for alligators! Sensory bins are amazing for preschoolers because they engage multiple senses while learning. This themed sensory bin reinforces the letter A sound while providing calming, focused play. You can use this sensory bin all week long as you work on the letter A.

How to do it:

  1. Fill a large bin (a plastic storage container works great) with 4-6 cups of rice or dried beans. If you want, dye the rice green for an alligator swamp theme (mix rice with a few drops of food coloring and rubbing alcohol, let dry).
  2. Hide 3-5 toy alligators in the rice.
  3. Add measuring cups, scoops, and small containers for pouring and transferring.
  4. Optional: Add other "A" objects like toy apples or airplanes.
  5. Let your child dig, pour, scoop, and discover the alligators.
  6. As they play, emphasize: "A is for alligator! Can you make the alligator say /a/, /a/, alligator?"
  7. Ask them to find all the items that start with A.

Learning benefit: Reinforces beginning letter sounds, provides sensory input, and builds fine motor skills through scooping and pouring.

Activity 6: Salt Tray Letter Tracing

⏱️ Prep Time: 3 minutes
 🎨 Materials: Shallow tray or baking sheet, salt or sand, letter A card

This multi-sensory approach to letter writing helps children feel the letter's shape with their finger. The salt provides tactile feedback that helps reinforce the muscle memory needed for handwriting. Plus, mistakes are easy to fix - shake the tray and start over!

How to do it:

  1. Pour a thin layer of salt (or colored sand) into a shallow tray or rimmed baking sheet.
  2. Show your child how to form the letter A in the salt using their pointer finger.
  3. Say the letter formation steps as they trace: "Start at the top, pull down to make a line. Start at the top again, pull down the other way. Now make a line across the middle."
  4. Let them trace the letter A multiple times.
  5. For younger children, you can trace it first, then have them trace over your lines.
  6. Shake the tray gently to erase and start fresh.

Extension: Use a paintbrush instead of a finger, write in shaving cream on a table, or trace letters in sand at the beach or sandbox.

Learning benefit: Pre-writing skills, letter formation practice, and sensory learning.

Activity 7: Beginning Sound Sorting

⏱️ Prep Time: 5 minutes
 🎨 Materials: Picture cards or small objects, two baskets or containers, letter A card

This phonics activity helps your child connect the letter A with its sound. It's a simple but powerful exercise that builds phonemic awareness - one of the strongest predictors of reading success. You can use this same setup for every letter!

How to do it:

  1. Gather 5-7 picture cards or small objects that start with A (apple, airplane, alligator, ant, arrow, acorn) and 5-7 that start with a different letter (like B: ball, banana, bear, book).
  2. Label two baskets or containers - one with the letter A, one with another letter (like B).
  3. Show your child each picture or object one at a time.
  4. Say the word slowly, emphasizing the beginning sound: "Aaaapple. Do you hear /a/ at the beginning? Apple starts with the letter A!"
  5. Ask your child to put it in the correct basket.
  6. If they're unsure, repeat the sound together and guide them to the right basket.

Extension: Once they master sorting two letters, add a third basket with a different letter.

Learning benefit: Develops phonemic awareness, auditory discrimination, and letter-sound correspondence.

Activity 8: Sticker Letter Fill

⏱️ Prep Time: 5 minutes
 🎨 Materials: Stickers (any kind), large letter A outline, glue (optional)

Kids absolutely love peeling and sticking! This simple activity lets them fill the letter A with colorful stickers while building letter recognition. It's perfect for younger preschoolers who might not be ready for tracing or writing but can still learn the letter's shape.

How to do it:

  1. Print or draw a large bubble letter A on cardstock.
  2. Give your child a sheet of stickers—dot stickers, star stickers, or any stickers you have on hand work great.
  3. Show them how to peel the stickers and place them inside the lines of the letter A.
  4. Encourage them to fill the entire letter, placing stickers close together.
  5. As they work, keep saying: "You're decorating the letter A! This is the letter A."
  6. Count the stickers when finished: "You used 23 stickers to make your letter A!"

Variations: Use pom-poms with glue dots, beans with glue, or torn tissue paper squares instead of stickers.

Learning benefit: Fine motor development (peeling stickers), letter shape recognition, and hand-eye coordination.

Activity 9: Letter A Floor Hop

⏱️ Prep Time: 3 minutes
 🎨 Materials: Painter's tape (or chalk if outdoors), open floor space

This gross motor activity is perfect for active learners who need to move while they learn! Combining physical movement with letter recognition helps some children learn better. Plus, it's a great way to burn off energy on rainy days.

How to do it:

  1. Use painter's tape to create a large letter A on your floor (each line should be about 3-4 feet long).
  2. Show your child the letter and say, "This is the letter A!"
  3. Have them hop, jump, walk, or tiptoe along the lines of the letter A.
  4. Call out directions: "Start at the top and hop down the first line! Now go back to the top and hop down the other line! Now hop across the middle!"
  5. If you have multiple children, make it a game: "Who can walk the letter A without stepping off the tape?"

Extension: Make several letters on the floor. Call out a letter and have them run to that letter and trace it with their feet.

Learning benefit: Gross motor skills, spatial awareness, letter recognition, and kinesthetic learning.

Activity 10: Letter A Snack Formation

⏱️ Prep Time: 5 minutes
 🎨 Materials: Crackers, cheese slices, apple slices, or pretzel sticks

Turn snack time into letter learning! This edible activity combines fine motor practice with letter recognition—and your child gets to eat their creation when they're done. It's a perfect way to end your letter A activities on a delicious note.

How to do it:

  1. Choose snack items that can be arranged into shapes (graham crackers, cheese crackers, cheese slices cut into strips, apple slices, pretzel sticks, or string cheese pulled into strips).
  2. Show your child the letter A on a card or write it on paper as a reference.
  3. Help them arrange their snack items on a plate to form the letter A: two pieces for the slanted sides meeting at the top, and one piece across the middle.
  4. Talk about the letter shape as they build: "A has two slanted lines that meet at the top, and one line across the middle."
  5. Take a photo of their edible letter before they eat it!
  6. While eating, practice the letter sound: "A says /a/ like in apple!"

Extension: Try different food combinations - pretzel sticks for the sides and a cheese strip for the middle bar, or apple slices arranged in an A shape. For younger children, draw the letter A outline on the plate with a dry-erase marker as a guide.

Learning benefit: Letter shape recognition, fine motor skills, following a model/pattern, spatial awareness, and letter-sound connection.

Tips for Teaching Letter A Successfully

Start with Uppercase First

Uppercase letters are visually simpler and easier for young children to recognize and write. Introduce uppercase A first, then add lowercase a once they're confident with the capital letter.

Connect the Letter to Your Child's World

Point out the letter A everywhere—on food packages, street signs, toy boxes, and in books. Say things like, "Look! 'Apple' starts with the letter A!" This real-world connection helps cement letter recognition.

Do Multiple Activities in One Week

Don't try to do all 10 activities in one day. Spread them across a week, doing 1-2 activities each day. This repetition in different formats helps children truly learn and remember the letter.

Focus on the Sound, Not Just the Name

Always teach both the letter name ("This is the letter A") and the letter sound ("A says /a/ like in apple"). Phonics skills are crucial for reading success.

Make It Playful, Not Pressured

If your child isn't interested one day, that's okay! Put the activity away and try again another time. Learning should feel like play, not work.

Adjust for Your Child's Age

For 3-year-olds, focus on letter recognition and simple crafts. For 4-5 year-olds, add letter writing practice and beginning sound activities. Every child develops at their own pace.