Cursive Alphabet Worksheets (From A-Z)

On this page, you will find my complete glossary of A-Z cursive alphabet worksheets that are all free to download and print! The idea for this series came about when I struggled to find high-quality cursive printables online while helping my children with homework.

Fast forward a few weeks, and this series of free cursive alphabet worksheets was born! For each of the below letters, you will find ten unique pages with different tasks for all age levels. Also, you will find a multi-page PDF of all the individual pages within each page!

Cursive Alphabet Worksheets Featured Image

To access any of these worksheets, click on the corresponding image or link to open the expanded pages. Once opened, you can download each page individually or in a single PDF, entirely for free!

If you like these free worksheets, please share them with friends, family, and colleagues! Happy writing!

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More Free Printables You Might Enjoy

If you’re looking for more related printables that kids love, we think you’ll particularly enjoy these collections:

10 Reasons Why Kids Should Learn The Cursive Alphabet

Cursive isn’t taught in many schools today, but it should be. Here are ten reasons why kids should still be learning the cursive alphabet.

10. Writing In Cursive Is Good For The Brain

While it is difficult to create a control for cursive versus printing in an experimental setting, some studies have shown that, while handwriting, in general, is good for the brain, cursive is best.

And in young children, whose brains are still developing, “more neurons fire in different ways than printing.”

So, the young brain, as it encounters new information, creates new and different neural pathways when it studies cursive.

And with repetition and lots of practice, those neural pathways can become permanent, leading to a better, more well-rounded brain in childhood and beyond.

9. Writing In Cursive Builds Fine Motor Skills

While many of us who write in cursive as adults hardly think about the movements of our pen, it wasn’t always so.

In fact, if you were to go back to when you were learning cursive, you were probably quite slow and concentrating hard.

That’s good, though – it means your brain was working to send signals to your hand to write those loopy, slanted letters.

Learning cursive helps children develop their fine motor skills – after all, they even hold the pencil differently, and the eye/hand coordination needed is delicate.

8. Writing In Cursive Improves Recall

A 2020 study done by the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, led by Audrey Van der Meer, found that writing in cursive helps improve recall.

“Writing by hand creates much more activity in the sensorimotor parts of the brain,” Van der Meer writes.

“These sensory experiences create contact between different parts of the brain and open the brain up for learning.”

Young students are not only pressing the pencil to paper; they’re seeing the letters formed and sounding out the letters or words while writing.

This, in turn, helps them remember what they were writing more clearly.

7. Learning The Cursive Alphabet Can Help Students Spell Better

In much the same fashion as recall, writing in cursive also improves students’ ability to spell words.

Because of the sensory experiences kids are undergoing and the brain’s neural activity, not only are kids recalling what they write more clearly, but they’re also remembering how they wrote it.

6. Cursive Connects Kids To History

Whether they’re studying the Declaration of Independence or simply going through their grandma’s old recipes, the ability to read cursive connects kids to history.

There was a period of time when many of the historical figures in the Western world wrote almost entirely in cursive.

The ability to see and read these historical documents, letters, etc., as they were written – not printed out on a card – is vastly important to studying centuries before.

Then there is the kids’ own personal, familial history; if they don’t learn cursive, they might not be able to read the Christmas cards grandparents send them or old letters.

5. Cursive Can Help Students With Disabilities Learn To Read And Write

Because some printed letters look very similar – especially b and d – dyslexic students can have difficulty mastering reading and writing.

However, lowercase b and d in cursive look quite different – making it much easier for dyslexic students to decipher which letter is which.

From there, cursive can help students who are dyslexic improve the fluidity of their reading and writing, making them more confident and bolstering their self-esteem.

4. Some Legal Documents Require A Cursive Signature

A friend of mine works in an office and had a younger person come in to sign some documents.

They gave them the clipboard with the pages attached and then noticed, some minutes later, the young person struggling.

It turned out that person had never learned cursive, and so they were really at a loss as to how to sign their own name.

While the trend is toward printing as a signature, some old-school documents will always require a cursive one, with the printed name on a different line.

3. Cursive Sets Up Kids For Later Life

Not only does learning the cursive alphabet benefit kids while they’re young, but it may also have an impact on their cognitive ability all their lives.

The College Board found that students who wrote in cursive on the essay section of the SATs scored slightly higher than those who printed.

And William Klemm, Ph.D., author of a Psychology Today article, compares cursive writing to playing a musical instrument in terms of brain activity.

That means that if students learn cursive while they’re young and retain it as they get older, they’ll be doing their brains a great service well into old age.

2. Cursive Is A Faster Way To Write

For many of us, our brains think faster than our fingers can keep up with, but cursive has the edge on printing when it comes to the speed of writing.

This is because we pick up the pencil less frequently when writing in cursive.

If your child has a lot of ideas, encourage them to learn cursive so that they can write down everything they dream up much more quickly than printing.

1. Cursive Is Beautiful And Boosts Creativity

Frankly, cursive is beautiful, a cousin to calligraphy – it’s basically like a form of art.

And like art, learning cursive boosts mental activity in the brain and improves left/right brain coordination.

This promotes a stronger, more active brain – from which creativity springs.

Researchers at the University of Washington found that kids who wrote in cursive, versus on a keyboard, “were writing more words and expressing more ideas.”