Learning Outcomes
Letter r tracing page → lowercase r formation → smoother starting points and controlled pencil strokes for clearer handwriting.
Rabbit picture cue → letter-to-sound connection → easier recall of the /r/ sound and better letter recognition during reading.
Shared parent-child tracing → fine-motor practice → confidence to try new letter shapes and stay on task for short sessions.
More about letter R
Rr
[ a: ]
Lowercase r Tracing Worksheet With Rabbit
This worksheet asks your child to trace the lowercase letter r in printed style, paired with a rabbit picture. It’s focused handwriting practice that supports letter formation and pencil control.
At this age, it is common for kids to get stuck on where to start or to drag their pencil too hard. The rabbit picture helps the lowercase r feel like a “real” letter, not just a shape on paper.
Try this with the exact page: point to the rabbit, say “rabbit starts with r,” then trace one letter slowly with your finger. Next, let your child trace the same letter, one row at a time, while you remind them to go where the printed line goes.
What makes this worksheet different from a generic tracing sheet is the matching picture cue. The letter r and the rabbit idea stay side by side, so short practice feels more meaningful and less random.
Limited Time Sale
Kids’ Workbooks!
Boost your child’s skills with our discounted workbooks. Engaging activities for preschool, kindergarten, and grade 1 - now at special sale prices!








Fast shipping
Secure Payment
Licensed Teachers
For the planet
Printed in the USA
Find fresh ideas
To help your little learners grow!
Helpful guides for parents and teachers, and tips for making learning at home super fun.

A calm age-by-age guide to fisted, digital pronate, four-finger, and tripod pencil grips, with what to leave alone and when to offer help.
Sunny Hedge
A practical printable roundup for cutting practice preschool, ordered by scissor-skill stage with what to watch for at each step.
Sunny Hedge
Most children start with supervised snipping at 2 to 3, short lines around 4, and simple shapes around 5 to 6. Here is a calm way to begin.
Sunny Hedge
A parent-friendly guide to number bonds to 10, with a simple chart, hands-on teaching steps, and printable practice for ages 3 to 7.
Sunny HedgeJoin the Screen-Free Movement.
Get exclusive activities, expert tips, and inspiration for a more meaningful, offline family life.





