

This Kindergarten worksheet introduces young learners to an exciting letter hunt experience where they search, spot, and use given letters in a variety of engaging tasks. Designed to strengthen early literacy, it helps children connect letter recognition with real words and everyday contexts through playful and structured practice.
1. It sharpens visual scanning and attention skills in young children.
2. It helps learners quickly recognize letters in different fonts and layouts.
3. It builds confidence in identifying correct letters within words and sentences.
4. It supports early reading and spelling development through repeated exposure.
🧠 Exercise 1 – Find and Circle the Given Letter
Children search a colorful picture filled with mixed letters and circle all occurrences of the given letter (such as “S”). This boosts focus and visual discrimination.
✏️ Exercise 2 – Multiple Choice: Find the Most Seen Letter
Learners observe rows of letters and choose the option that appears the most. This builds comparison skills and strengthens letter familiarity.
📋 Exercise 3 – Fill in the Missing Letter
Children complete simple, meaningful sentences by writing the correct missing letter (e.g., rainy, ball, park, dog, mangoes). Picture clues support understanding.
📝 Exercise 4 – Short Writing Task
Students write 1–2 lines about objects starting with the letters “J” and “R,” encouraging vocabulary building and early sentence formation.
Exercise 1 – Find and Circle
All occurrences of the letter “S” are to be circled in the picture.
Exercise 2 – Multiple Choice
1. c 2. c 3. a 4. c 5. c 6. c 7. b 8. c 9. c 10. b
Exercise 3 – Fill in the Blanks
1. rainy
2. ball
3. park
4. dog
5. mangoes
6. tree
7. gifts
8. water
9. nest
10. yellow
Exercise 4 – Short Writing
Answers may vary.
Turn letter learning into a fun discovery game that builds confidence, curiosity, and strong reading readiness in your child.
🔖Book a free trial!
To help children quickly recognize a target letter among many.
Children learn to search carefully and ignore distractors.
Yes, by timing how fast the child finds all the target letters.