Capitalization Teaching Resources
Teach students the capitalization rules this school year with printable worksheets, fun writing games, instructional slide decks and more elementary school teaching resources designed to help extend and improve your students' understanding of when to capitalize letters in their writing.
Teachers have created this extensive collection of teaching resources for teachers like you to teach this important part of writing mechanics. Aligned to the Common Core curriculum, the ELA collection includes editable worksheets and teaching presentations and more to help you cut back on lesson planning time.
Created by expert teachers, each resource in this capitalization collection has been carefully reviewed and curated by our team. That means it's ready to use in the classroom! You'll even find editable resources, plus differentiated options.
New to teaching this part of the ELA curriculum, or just looking for fresh ways to engage your students? Read on for a primer from our teaching team!
What Is Capitalization? A Kid-Friendly Definition
Teaching capitalization? Here's a way to explain the definition to students in a kid-friendly manner.
Capitalization is when we use an uppercase letter (also called a capital letter!) at the beginning of a word instead of a small letter. It's like giving the word a special hat to make it stand out!
Capitalization Rules and Examples for Kids
When do you capitalize a letter, and when should you stick to lowercase? Let's take a look at some of the capitalization rules that students can use to make their writing easier for the reader, plus some examples of capital letters used correctly!
- Always capitalize the first letter of the first word in a sentence. Example: The dog barked loudly.
- Capitalize the first letter of people's names. Example: Javier is my friend.
- Capitalize the first letter of the name of a place. Example: I live in New York City.
- Capitalize the first letter of the days of the week and the months of the year. Example: Today is Monday, May 15.
- Capitalize the first letter of the first word and all other important words in a title of a book, movie or song. Example: I really enjoyed reading "Beezus and Ramona."
- Always capitalize the pronoun I.
- Capitalize the first letter of the name of a historical event or a holiday. Example: I learned about the Revolutionary War in social studies.
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Capitalization Worksheet - Beginning of Sentences, Names, and Pronoun I
Identify and write correct capitalization in sentences with our capitalization practice worksheet.
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Capitalization Scoot Activity
Practice capitalizing words at the beginning of a sentence, the personal pronoun I, and the names of people with a set of 20 task cards.
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General Writing Checklist (Printable Poster for the Classroom)
A writing checklist poster to use with your primary students across multiple genres.
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Christmas Sentence Correction Worksheets
Edit and correct capitalization and punctuation errors with a set of Christmas Fix the Sentence worksheets.
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Capitalize it! Task Cards - Primary
Reinforce capitalization for proper nouns, the pronoun ‘I,’ and the beginning of sentences in text with this set of task cards.
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Capitalization for Beginners - Worksheet
Practice capitalizing the first letter of sentences and proper nouns with this 1-page worksheet.
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Fixing Capitalization Worksheet
Reinforce capitalization rules with this capital letters worksheet that features 10 sentences with missing capitalization.