Fall Letter Matching Activity
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Fall is the perfect time to bring nature into your learning activities! This Fall Letter Matching Activity combines outdoor exploration with hands-on literacy practice that kids will love. Whether you’re collecting acorns in the backyard, at school, or on a nature walk, this activity transforms a simple seasonal treasure into an engaging learning tool. Kids will practice matching uppercase and lowercase letters while developing fine motor skills, attention to detail, and early reading readiness, all through play.
Supplies for Fall Letter Matching Activity:
- Acorns
- Sharpie markers
- Optional tray or basket for organizing
Instructions:
- Use a Sharpie to write an uppercase letter on the bottom half of an acorn.
- On the acorn’s top, write the matching lowercase letter.
- Repeat this for each letter of the alphabet.
- Mix up all the acorn tops and bottoms in a tray or basket.
- Invite children to match each uppercase letter with its corresponding lowercase letter by placing the tops onto the correct bottoms.
Benefits for Kids:
- Strengthens letter recognition and alphabet knowledge.
- Develops fine motor skills as children handle small acorn pieces.
- Encourages problem-solving and matching skills.
- Adds a seasonal, hands-on twist to learning letters that keeps kids engaged.
Key Benefits by Setting
This simple, nature-inspired activity blends literacy and motor development in one meaningful fall experience, perfect for home, school, or therapy sessions.
For Parents at Home:
This activity is a wonderful way to make learning fun and screen-free. Parents can use it to reinforce letter recognition, prepare preschoolers for kindergarten, or offer a calming, focused activity after outdoor play. Collecting and sorting acorns together also provides quality bonding time while supporting hand strength and coordination.
For Educators in the Classroom:
Teachers can easily adapt this activity for literacy centers, small group work, or outdoor learning lessons. It encourages hands-on engagement and helps children connect letters with real-world materials. You can even differentiate the task by focusing on only a few letters at a time for beginners or using it for alphabet review games.
For Therapists in the Clinic or School Setting:
Occupational therapists and speech-language pathologists can use this activity to target multiple skill areas simultaneously. Handling acorns builds fine motor control, bilateral coordination, and grasp development, while identifying and matching letters supports visual discrimination and language goals. The natural, sensory component of acorns also offers tactile input that can be calming and grounding for children with sensory processing needs.
For more ideas like this one, check out the suggestions below.
Heather Greutman, COTA
Heather Greutman is a Certified Occupational Therapy Assistant with experience in school-based OT services for preschool through high school. She uses her background to share child development tips, tools, and strategies for parents, educators, and therapists. She is the author of many ebooks including The Basics of Fine Motor Skills, and Basics of Pre-Writing Skills, and co-author of Sensory Processing Explained: A Handbook for Parents and Educators.