Valentine's Day Find the Letter Activities for Preschoolers

Valentine’s Day Find the Letter Activities for Preschoolers

Sharing is caring!

Affiliate Disclosure: “This post contains affiliate links, which means I receive a small commission, at no extra cost to you, if you make a purchase using those links.”

These FREE Valentine’s Day Find the Letter activities are perfect for your literacy and writing centers, as a Quiet area option, or even as a take-home activity during this holiday season. 

Valentine's Day Find the Letter Activities for Preschoolers
Valentine’s Day Find the Letter Activities for Preschoolers

This set of find the letters activities includes 12 pages, one for each of the words heart, key, cupid, potion, arrow, letter, lock, gift, flower, cake, mailbox, and chocolates, using the letters Hh, Kk, Cc, Pp, Aa, Ll, Gg, Ff and Mm, which are some of the beginning letters of words that are typically used during Valentine’s Day.

Your preschoolers will love to work on recognizing the uppercase and lowercase versions of those letters among many other letters of the alphabet, in these adorable activities.

Each page has a white background to save on ink, but I wanted to include the featured image in color to make it more attractive and extra fun for your children.  You can always print it out in black and white if you don’t want the color.  The image will be seen regardless.

These activities also work great to be used for your “letter of the week”, learning one letter at a time, or in combination with my other Valentine’s Day activities, which can be found below for your convenience.  They all include free printables. 

This type of activity will help preschoolers develop their letter-recognition skills.  Letter recognition is very important to preschoolers for multiple reasons.  Some of those reasons are:

  • Helps them develop the skills to recognize letters, start connecting those letters to their sounds, and put together sounds to form words, setting up the foundation for reading and writing.
  • Set up the foundation to learn reading and writing later on.
  • Enhance their ability to express thoughts and ideas.
  • Develop their vocabulary by learning new words.
  • Upper-case and lower-case letter discrimination
  • Fine motor skills development.
  • Concentration skills.

The materials will depend on how you want to use these printables and how long you want them to last.

If you just want to print them and hand them to your children for one-time use, you will need:

However, if you want to be creative and change things around adding a bit of extra fun for your kiddos, you can use other materials such as:

If you don’t want to print out different pages for your children but want to reuse the printables multiple times, you can print out the pages on white cardstock and laminate them.  If you want to save on lamination costs, you can stick the pages in a dry-erase pocket and have your preschoolers use a dry-erase marker to make this activity reusable.

Give the child one page at a time, and have him/her say the name of the letter on the upper part of the sheet and try to “read” the word, looking at the picture.  Then circle the upper-case and lower-case letters feature on the sheet, using a crayon, dot-to-dot marker, regular markers, or pencil

If you want to make the activities more challenging for more advanced children, you can have them circle the upper-case letters in red and the lower-case letters in pink, for example.

If you don’t want to use this idea, you can let your children use any of the other materials to mark the letter they are looking for, such as buttons, fingerpaint, counting chips, pom-poms, or mini hearts.

If you know me a little bit already, you might know that I’m big on using books, with every theme you talk about in your classroom, and to do that you don’t even have to read them all the time!

Just by showing your children the pictures of a book and letting them create the story in their minds and talking about them, you are modeling how to hold a book the right way and turn the pages gently, how you read from top to bottom and left to right (the way you also write correctly).

These are some good suggestions you can use for Valentine’s.  You can find all of these books at your local library, at a used books store, and Amazon.  You can use the links in each picture to get them through my Amazon links, so you can grow your library for years to come.

How Many Do I Love You?  by Chery Lord-ByrdThis children’s counting book is full of love and each flip of the page allows you to practice counting to 10, discover fun-loving messages, and look at cute illustrations of animals.

How to Catch a Loveosaurus: A Valentine’s Day Adventure by Alice Walstead. Blending exciting traps and STEAM concepts with hilarity and chaos to encourage reading, learning, and imagination, this charming adventure will delight young readers, families, and educators alike.

The Night Before Valentine’s Day by Natasha Wing.  This story invites you to join in on all of the colorful fun, and then come along to school the next morning for a day of parties and games!

There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Rose! by Lucille Colandro.  With rhyming text and hilarious illustrations, this wacky version of the classic song will appeal to young readers as they follow the Old Lady on a wild Valentine’s Day adventure.

Groggle’s Monster Valentine by Diana Murray.  Follow Groggle Monster on his Valentine’s Day card-making for Snarlina, his beast friend in the whole wide world.

Day It Rained Hearts by Felicia BondOne day it rains hearts, that are perfect for making valentines, and Cornelia Augusta catches them to send them to her animal friends.

I Love You More, Babysaur by Rose Russner.  Filled with cute dinosaur puns, beautiful illustrations, full dinosaur names and pronunciations, and a heartwarming message, this story is perfect for sharing with someone you love.

Happy Valentine’s Day, Mouse! by Laura NumeroffThis board book with sturdy pages is perfect for preschoolers, who will enjoy the simple introduction to the fun of Valentine’s Day.

Little Critter: Happy Valentine’s Day, Little Critter! by Mercer Meyer.  This storybook is complete with gatefold flaps for readers to pull back and discover all the fun Valentine’s Day surprises.

I Love You Like No Otter by Rose Russner.  This book combines a warm message of love with beautifully illustrated animals. 

If you are in a rush and don’t have time to read the post and download the printable but want to save it for later, pin it to your Valentine’s Day board on Pinterest, so you can have it available when you need it.

Valentine's Day Find the Letter Activities for Preschoolers

I hope you have tons of fun with your preschoolers during Valentine’s Day week, and don’t forget to download your FREE Valentine’s Day Find the Letter activities.  Just enter your email address in the box to confirm your subscription and the pdf file will open instantly for you to print and save.

Love,

Yey

P.S. If you would like to see an article about how to make something specific, please let me know and I will try my best to write it for you.

Sharing is caring!