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Looking for simple, hands-on ways to make your Letter K week more fun? These Letter K extension activities are easy to prep, engaging for young learners, and perfect for preschool and kindergarten. Whether you are teaching at home or in the classroom, these activities give children a chance to explore the letter K through art, sensory play, shape work, and creative building.
This roundup includes six low-prep Letter K activities that pair well with your worksheets, read-alouds, or letter of the week lessons. Use the jump links below to head straight to the activity you want to try first.
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Letter K Extension Activities
- Koala Painted Plate Craft
- Paper Kite Craft
- Key Shape Matching Activity
- K is for Kiwi Letter Craft
- Kitchen Sensory Bin
- Kazoo Craft
Koala Painted Plate Craft
This sweet koala craft is a fun and simple way to reinforce K is for koala. Kids get to paint, glue, and build a friendly koala face using a paper plate and a few easy supplies.
Supplies Needed
- Paper plate
- Gray paint
- Paintbrush
- Gray paper circles for ears
- Cotton balls
- Googly eyes
- Black paper or cardstock for the nose
- Glue
- Scissors
How to Make the Craft
- Paint the paper plate gray and let it dry.
- Cut out two paper circles for the koala’s ears.
- Glue cotton balls onto the circles to make fluffy ears.
- Attach the ears to the top of the paper plate.
- Add googly eyes and glue on a simple black nose shape.
- Let everything dry before displaying your koala craft.
Why It Works
This activity reinforces K is for koala while helping children practice painting, gluing, and assembling simple shapes. It also supports fine motor skills and early letter-word connections.
Paper Kite Craft
This colorful kite craft is quick to prep and easy for little hands. It is a great way to connect the letter K with a familiar object while giving kids room to be creative.
Supplies Needed
- Colored paper or cardstock
- Paper straws
- String, ribbon, or yarn
- Glue or tape
- Markers, crayons, or stickers
- Scissors
How to Make the Craft
- Cut a simple kite shape from colored paper.
- Let kids decorate the kite with crayons, markers, or stickers.
- Glue or tape paper straws on the back in a support shape.
- Attach a piece of string or ribbon to the bottom as the kite tail.
- Display the finished kites or hang them up for a fun classroom decoration.
Why It Works
This activity encourages creativity and fine motor practice while reinforcing K is for kite. It also gives children experience with simple building and design.
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Key Shape Matching Activity
This hands-on shape activity turns a simple paper craft into a fun matching game. Children build their own key shape and then try to match it to its traced outline like they are unlocking something special.
Supplies Needed
- Construction paper
- Pre-cut shapes like circles, triangles, and squares
- Long strip of paper for the key base
- Glue
- Pencil or marker
- Scissors
How to Do the Activity
- Cut a long strip of paper to act as the key base.
- Glue different shapes onto one end of the strip to create a unique key design.
- Place the completed key on another paper and trace around it.
- Remove the key and invite children to match the key to its outline.
- Repeat with new key designs if you want to make the activity more challenging.
Why It Works
This activity builds shape recognition, visual discrimination, and spatial awareness. It also makes K is for key interactive and memorable for young learners.
K is for Kiwi Letter Craft
This kiwi-inspired letter craft is such a fun way to turn the letter K into something colorful and playful. It is especially great for kids who enjoy texture and layered art projects.
Supplies Needed
- Green paper
- Toilet paper roll
- Scissors
- Glue
- Yellow stickers or yellow paper circles
- Small seeds or seed-like sprinkles such as spices or tiny black paper dots

How to Make the Craft
- Cut out a large letter K from green paper.
- Cut a toilet paper roll into small round rings.
- Glue the rings onto the letter K.
- Add a yellow sticker or paper circle to the center of each ring.
- Sprinkle or glue on small seed details to make the rings look like kiwi slices.
- Let the craft dry completely before moving it.
Why It Works
This craft connects the letter shape to a meaningful K word while giving children extra gluing and placement practice. It supports fine motor development and letter recognition in a creative, memorable way.
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Kitchen Sensory Bin
A kitchen sensory bin is an easy and playful way to reinforce K is for kitchen. This activity works well for independent play, small groups, or centers, and it encourages lots of pretend play and conversation.
Supplies Needed
- A sensory bin or large container
- Filler such as dry rice, beans, pasta, or another sensory base
- Play kitchen tools
- Pretend food or toy food
- Small bowls, cups, scoops, or spoons
How to Set Up the Activity
- Fill a bin with your chosen sensory filler.
- Add play food, kitchen tools, bowls, and scoops.
- Invite children to scoop, pour, stir, sort, and pretend to cook.
- Talk about kitchen words and actions while they play.
- Supervise as needed, especially with younger children or small materials.
Why It Works
This activity encourages sensory exploration, imaginative play, and language development. It also supports fine motor practice while reinforcing a strong letter K vocabulary word.
Kazoo Craft
This homemade kazoo is a fun way to explore sound during Letter K week. It is simple to make and gives children a chance to create something they can actually use afterward.
Supplies Needed
- Cardstock rolled into a tube or a toilet paper tube
- Wax paper
- Rubber band
- Markers, crayons, or stickers for decorating
- Hole punch or pencil for making a small hole
- Scissors
How to Make the Craft
- Roll up cardstock into a tube or use an empty toilet paper roll.
- Decorate the tube with crayons, markers, or stickers.
- Cover one end with wax paper and secure it with a rubber band.
- Poke a small hole in the side of the tube.
- Hum into the open end to test your kazoo.
Why It Works
This activity introduces children to sound and vibration in a simple, hands-on way while reinforcing K is for kazoo. It also supports listening, creativity, and cause-and-effect learning.
More Letter K Printables and Alphabet Activities
These Letter K extension activities are a fun way to bring your alphabet lessons to life. From koalas and kites to kiwi crafts and kitchen play, each activity gives kids a hands-on way to connect with the letter K while practicing important early learning skills.
You can use these ideas in a classroom, at home, in a homeschool setting, or as part of a full letter of the week routine. Pick one or two activities to keep things simple, or try several throughout the week for a more playful and memorable Letter K experience.
Keep the alphabet fun going
Looking for more than just Letter K crafts? Explore my full ABC Directory for free alphabet printables, hands-on activities, and letter-by-letter learning ideas for preschool and kindergarten.
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