Letter P Worksheets

About These 15 Worksheets

The letter P is one of those sounds that kids love to play with-it pops right out of your mouth, like a little burst of air. These worksheets take that natural fun and turn it into focused learning. From coloring pandas and pumpkins to tracing neat lines of Ps, kids get a variety of activities that keep practice fresh.

What makes this set great is how it balances structure and play. Some pages are all about careful handwriting practice, while others sneak the letter into mazes, bubbles, or word hunts. That way, kids don’t just learn how P looks and sounds-they also learn how it shows up in real words and playful contexts. It’s letter learning that feels alive, not stiff.

Over time, these worksheets help kids connect the dots: P isn’t just a letter on the page, it’s in the pizza they eat, the penguins they adore, and the pencils they use every day. That connection between sound, symbol, and meaning is what makes early literacy click.

Have a Look Inside Each Worksheet

Spotting Letter P
Students scan through a field of letters to find and circle every P they can. It builds sharp visual recognition and focus. The puzzle-like format keeps practice engaging. A fun warm-up to get comfortable with the letter P.

Pen P
This worksheet connects the letter P with the word “pen,” helping kids link sound, shape, and meaning. Tracing and coloring give both handwriting and phonics practice. The theme ties learning to an everyday object. A simple but effective way to make P memorable.

P-Hunt
Learners go on a hunt for hidden P’s in a game-like setup. Each discovery feels rewarding and keeps attention high. The activity develops persistence and sharpens recognition. A lively challenge that helps the letter P really stick.

Rearrange P Words
Kids get to mix and match word segments to form words that begin with P-like pie, pan, or pen. It’s like a mini puzzle that makes phonics playful. By piecing letters together, students reinforce spelling and vocabulary. And they build that “aha!” moment when the word finally snaps into place.

Pumpkin Coloring
This worksheet features pumpkins along with tracing or identifying the letter P. Kids trace P’s and maybe color a cheerful pumpkin illustration. It connects the sound of P with a fun, seasonal image. And coloring adds a little creative calm to phonics practice.

Starting P Sound
Children identify which words or pictures begin with the P sound-like “panda” or “pencil.” It encourages careful listening and sound-letter matching. Reinforces phonemic awareness in a simple, direct way. Plus, it’s perfect for early readers just tuning into beginning sounds.

Letter P Mind Map
This activity invites students to brainstorm and map out P words around a central bubble. It deepens vocabulary by letting kids generate their own examples-pizza, penguin, paint, and more. Visually organizing words boosts memory and creativity. And it’s great for growing language thinking spaces in their brains.

Say, Circle, Write Ps
Kids first say the letter P aloud, then circle all P’s on the page, and finally practice writing them. It’s a three-step combo-speaking, spotting, and writing-in one cohesive worksheet. That multi-sensory loop cements learning fast. It’s like giving students a full P spotlight moment.

Lots To P-Do
This playful worksheet might involve circling P words, coloring, tracing, or listing items that start with P in a busy layout. It feels like a P-themed activity hub on paper. Engages multiple skills-phonics, fine-motor, and focus. And it’s both busy and brain-building in the best way.

P Maze
Students guide a pencil through a maze by following only paths marked with the letter P. It’s a game and a letter hunt rolled into one. Strengthens recognition under movement-a gentle cognitive challenge. And they get the joy of solving a maze with literacy flair.

Guess What Letter
Maybe a mystery box hides a letter-students guess if it’s uppercase P or lowercase p, based on clues or shapes. It sharpens letter shape recognition and scaffolds thinking. It’s simple but sneaks in brain-training as kids weigh possibilities. And the guessing element adds a fun twist.

Parrot Coloring
This worksheet includes a parrot drawing and spaces to trace or color the letter P. Birds and letters together? Win. Helps kids associate P with “parrot” while practicing handwriting. The friendly bird makes phonics feel breezy. And coloring keeps attention joyful.

P Bubbles
This bubbly activity likely shows a cluster of letter bubbles, where kids pop (or circle) the P’s. It’s playful, visual, and perfect for quick recognition tests. Offers repetition without the repetition vibe. And every popped P feels like a mini win.

P is For Panda
Featuring a cute panda, this worksheet either traces or identifies the P in “Panda.” It draws attention to P’s fun phonetic friends. Reinforces sound-symbol connection with the help of an adorable animal. A warm reminder that letters live in words we love.

P Skill Review
A review page to bring together all the P-practice-tracing, matching, identifying, maybe writing sentences. It checks how much students have absorbed. Kind of like a P-theme checkpoint before moving on. And it wraps up P week with a tidy bow.

Lots of P in Words
Word lists or short sentences packed with words starting with P-students underline or highlight them. Good practice for spotting patterns in context. Enhances phoneme awareness in reading flows. And it’s a rewarding treasure hunt as they hunt for P’s.

Penmanship Practice
Dedicated lines for tracing and then writing uppercase and lowercase P. It focuses on fine motor control and letter formation precision. Great handwriting foundational work with a single letter focus. And confidence builds with every clean P they write.

Letter P Handwriting
Another handwriting-focused worksheet, perhaps with repetition drills or guided stroke directions. It’s repetition without redundancy-designed for mastery. Reinforces stroke order, shape, and consistency. And gives young writers the space to refine their P craft.

Tips For Introducing Kids to the Letter P

Introducing kids to a new letter, such as the letter “P,” can be a fun and creative process. Here are some effective strategies:

1. Introduce the Letter Visually – Start by showing children both the uppercase and lowercase versions of the letter “P”. You could write it on a whiteboard, show it in a book, or even find objects that resemble the shape of “P”.

2. Sound it Out – Let the child hear the sound that the letter “P” makes. You might say words like “Pig”, “Pan”, “Pizza”, or “Pencil”. Make sure to emphasize the initial “P” sound in these words. You can also use rhymes or songs that feature the letter “P”, as music can be a fun and effective learning tool.

3. Why Not Worksheets? – As discussed earlier, worksheets are an excellent tool. They often include activities like tracing the letter, coloring images starting with the letter “P”, or matching the letter “P” with corresponding words.

4. Hands-on Activities – Provide hands-on experiences such as creating the letter “P” with clay, playdough, or pipe cleaners. Children could also paint or draw the letter. These activities engage multiple senses and help reinforce the shape and sound of the letter “P”.

5. Storytelling and Reading – Use stories that emphasize the letter “P” to make the learning more engaging. Find a book that focuses on the letter or where a main character’s name starts with “P”. This immerses the child in the sound and usage of the letter “P” in a fun, contextual way.

6. Daily Life Connections – Point out when you see the letter “P” in your daily life, perhaps on a sign, in a book, or on a cereal box. This shows that letters are not just things we learn at school or home, but they are everywhere around us.

7. Games – Play games that emphasize the letter “P”. For example, you might play “I Spy” and look for things that start with “P”. Or have a treasure hunt to find items that start with “P” around the house.