Learning Outcomes
Lowercase letter g tracing worksheet → letter formation practice → more confident g strokes for writing words and names.
Gloves picture cue → letter shape attention → better pencil control during tracing and easier recognition of g on the page.
Short guided sessions → handwriting routine building → less squirmy practice time and clearer letter starts and finishes.
More about letter G
Gg
[ dʒi: ]
Letter G Tracing Worksheet for Handwriting
This Letter G tracing worksheet practices handwriting and letter formation by asking a child to trace the lowercase g in printed style. The page pairs the letter with a gloves picture so letter practice connects to something familiar.
At age 6, steady practice helps the brain and hand remember how a letter starts, curves, and finishes. Many parents notice kids stall on letter shapes like g, because the shapes can feel like random squiggles and five-year-olds get bored fast.
Use this page in a two-minute sit-down. Point to the gloves picture, say “gloves,” and trace the lowercase g together from the top curve, around the loop, and down to the finishing stroke. For more pages like this, check Whizki Learning, then repeat the same pattern on the next worksheet right away.
The gloves picture gives a clear anchor while tracing, so the child does not need to guess where to begin. This worksheet focuses on one lowercase letter at a time, which helps first graders follow the exact stroke path for cleaner g formation than a generic writing sheet.
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