Letter V Crafts for Preschoolers: Free Printable Volcano Activity, Facts, and Tracing

Written By: author avatar Andrew

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Are you looking for Letter V crafts for preschoolers? This printable alphabet Letter V activity helps students learn the uppercase and lowercase letter V, sound out the letter V, and improve their motor skills with fun volcano crafts. Parents and teachers can use this page for letter-of-the-week activities, tracing practice, and teaching students simple facts about volcanoes that will keep them curious.

At CoolKidFacts, we want our alphabet craft pages to do more than just give you a quick activity. This Letter V page helps preschoolers not only make something fun, but also practice reading skills and motor skills, all while enjoying a real science theme that kids always find interesting. If your child is working on learning the letter V, this volcano-themed craft is a perfect place to start.

Letter V volcano activity printable for preschool with a volcano illustration and a simple lava fact.

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Free Printable Letter V Craft

This specially designed Letter V craft for preschoolers is built on the theme of a volcano, which makes the page great for young learners to remember. V is for Volcano is one of the most basic preschool letter pairings because not only is the word familiar, but the beginning sound is easy, and volcanoes are very interesting to kids.

This printable Letter V page can include:

  • a black-and-white volcano craft template
  • a color volcano craft template
  • uppercase V and lowercase v tracing
  • a cut-and-paste volcano craft
  • a simple coloring section for the volcano and the letter V
  • sound practice for the sound of V
  • a short volcano fact box

These give you several ways to use this page without having to find extra worksheets or activities somewhere else.

Why V Is for Volcano

The letter V can be a little harder for preschoolers because it is not always the first letter they think of when naming words, so it helps to use a word they already know. Volcano is a great choice because kids can picture it from books, pictures, videos, or science activities. They can also say the letter and say the word, hear the first sound, and build memory as they connect this letter to something they already know.

This volcano also fits well within CoolKidFacts. Once you finish the printable on the letter V, you can keep the lesson going by learning more about volcanoes or other letters on this site.

How to Make the Letter V Volcano Craft

This volcano craft is easy, simple, very low prep, and makes no mess.

What You Need

  • printed Letter V volcano template
  • scissors
  • glue stick
  • crayons, markers, or colored pencils
  • optional red, orange, yellow, and brown crayons
  • optional tissue paper for lava

How to Make It

  1. First, print the Letter V volcano page.
  2. Color the volcano and the letter V.
  3. Cut out the pieces.
  4. Glue the pieces to the page or onto the large letter V.
  5. Trace the uppercase and lowercase letter V.
  6. Say the letter name and the word volcano out loud together.
  7. Read about some volcano facts.

Easy Ways to Adapt This Activity

If you need to make it very simple, skip the cutting and only do coloring.

If you want it slightly longer or more difficult, add a tracing section after the craft.

If you are doing this in a classroom, let all the children decorate the volcano their own way.

What Kids Learn With This Letter V Activity

This printable does far more than just fill time. It helps preschoolers practice several learning skills all at once.

Kids can practice:

  • recognizing uppercase and lowercase letter V
  • hearing the beginning sound V in volcano
  • improving their motor skills and hand control with coloring and tracing the letter
  • improving their fine motor skills with cutting and gluing
  • growing their vocabulary past just the letter V for volcano
  • building long-term memory by connecting activities and science to the letter V

This makes it a perfect resource for both home and school-based learning.

Volcano Facts for Preschoolers

Volcanoes are a great science topic to use for Letter V because kids usually find them exciting, easy to recognize, and fun to talk about.

Illustration for Letter V crafts for preschoolers with an erupting volcano and five simple volcano facts.

Here are some quick facts you can use about volcanoes while discussing and doing this activity:

  • Volcanoes are openings in the Earth.
  • Some volcanoes erupt hot lava.
  • Volcanoes can also release ash and gas.
  • Some volcanoes are tall mountains.
  • There are volcanoes in different places around the world.

Letter V Sound Practice

Practice the sound V makes at the beginning of many words. After you finish this volcano craft, say the sound together a few times and help practice these words, as well as any others you can think of.

Try saying some of these:

  • V is for volcano
  • V is for van
  • V is for vase
  • V is for vine
  • V is for vet

Keep this practice short, as the goal is not to say as many words as you can in one sitting. It is designed to help kids notice the repetition of the sound at the beginning of the word and match that to the letter they see.

Letter V Words for Preschoolers

Here are some simple V words you can use for preschoolers:

  • volcano
  • van
  • vase
  • vine
  • vet
  • vacuum
  • violin
  • vegetables

You can also turn this into a quick game by asking kids to find words that start with the letter V, maybe in a newspaper, on TV, or in a printout.

Lowercase v and Uppercase V

Preschoolers always benefit from seeing the letters in both uppercase and lowercase.

Here is what they look like:

  • Uppercase: V
  • Lowercase: v

You can also help by saying:

  • This is the uppercase V.
  • This is the lowercase v.
Educational chart showing uppercase V and lowercase v on a light background

Tracing, Coloring, and Cut-and-Paste Practice

These are designed to help not only make crafts, but also have activities that allow students to remember what the letters look like.

Letter V Tracing

Have your child trace the uppercase letter V first, then the lowercase v. Encourage them to try this next to the page without having to trace the lines.

Color the Volcano

Let the kids color the volcano in whatever colors they would like. This keeps the activity very fun and engaging for them.

Cut-and-Paste Volcano Activity

Using a simple set of volcano pieces, including the mountain shape, lava, smoke, and ground, kids can glue a volcano together on or next to the letter V.

Circle the Letter V

Put a bunch of random letters on a page and have children circle every letter V that they find. You can also include uppercase and lowercase letters.

More Letter V Activities

If you want to lengthen the lesson, here are some other things you can do.

V Sound Hunt

Look around the room with your class or child and see if they can find anything else that starts with the letter V.

Volcano Coloring Game

Here is a fun one to make the lesson more active and creative. Have kids color the lava in bright colors and talk about the colors they picked.

Draw Your Own Volcano

Ask children to draw a volcano from memory. This is a way to help identify those who might have drawing skills.

V Coloring Challenge

Color things that start with the letter V.

Van and Volcano

If you want a second word that starts with the letter V, let kids color a van after this craft is finished and then talk about the word van.

Teaching Tips for Parents and Teachers

We always want to keep these lessons very easy to follow and simple. Preschoolers do not need long activities with detailed instructions.

A good lesson including alphabet crafts for the letter V can look like this:

  1. Start by showing the difference between uppercase and lowercase V.
  2. Say the sound together a few times.
  3. Make some volcano and V-themed crafts.
  4. Trace the letter V in uppercase and lowercase.
  5. Read and talk about some volcano facts.

This is also a good page for:

  • preschool morning work
  • take-home activity
  • homework
  • small group practice
  • homeschool activities
  • quiet-time educational activities

Why Parents and Teachers Like Printable Letter Pages

These printable crafts make life so easy because they keep the lesson in one place, and all you have to do is print them out and go. You do not have to search for crafts, worksheets, and tracing pages. Everything is here all in one place.

This is great for busy parents and teachers, as it gives them an easy guided activity that not only lets kids learn parts of the alphabet, but also keeps them engaged as they get to make a craft.

After finishing this activity, keep going with more pages on the site.

Some great next pages include:

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good Letter V craft for preschoolers?

This volcano craft is one of the best Letter V crafts for preschoolers because volcano is not only a familiar word, but the beginning sound is very easy to understand, and the activity develops fine motor skills.

Does this Letter V page include a printable?

Yes, this page was designed around a printable and activities for preschoolers.

What are some easy Letter V words for preschoolers?

Volcano, van, vase, vine, vet, vacuum, violin, and vegetables.

Is this Letter V activity good for preschool and pre-K?

Yes, this page is great for preschoolers and pre-K, and even up to kindergarten.

Can I use this page in a classroom?

Absolutely. Teachers have used this printable for morning work, small group practice, take-home practice, or letter-of-the-week lessons.

What should we do after the letter V?

After V, move on to Letter W or any other letter that you have not covered yet.

Conclusion

Letter V crafts for preschoolers are a very simple and fine way to utilize time teaching the letters of the alphabet while keeping students engaged with crafts. This printable volcano craft has easy practice for tracing, including sounding out the letters and some short volcano facts.

This gives parents and teachers a great activity for preschoolers that they can use right away with little to no setup. We recommend starting with the printable, keeping the lesson easy to follow, and continuing the learning with more pages on CoolKidFacts.com. When you are ready, move on to the next letter and keep building confidence one letter at a time.

author avatar
Andrew Owner and Editor in Chief
Andrew is the Owner and Editor in Chief of CoolKidFacts.com, A Chemical Engineering grad from the University of Texas at Austin, Andrew uses his experience of taking complicated topics and translating them into kid friendly and fact checked explainers in everyday language.

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