Why I Love Studymate Linking Cubes for Early Childhood Education

Hey educators!

Today I want to share one of my all-time favourite resources for preschoolers and early years learning — Studymate Linking Cubes (sometimes called linking blocks).

These colourful cubes are a must-have in any early childhood classroom, family day care, homeschooling setup, or STEM corner. They’re simple, open-ended, and surprisingly powerful for building so many foundational skills.

🎥 Watch the full video here:
👉 Studymate Linking Cubes – Fun STEM Learning for Preschoolers


🌈 What Makes Linking Cubes So Great

I take these cubes with me whenever I visit early childhood centres — and they never fail to spark curiosity!
Children love how they click and twist together on all sides, which means there’s no single “right way” to play. You can build trains, robots, towers, dinosaurs, or anything your imagination allows.

They’re also slightly challenging — perfect for building hand strength and fine motor control. Some children will find it easy to connect the cubes, while others need to use both hands and a bit of effort, which is excellent for developing grip and muscle coordination.


✋ Skills Developed Through Play

Here’s why these little cubes are so much more than a toy:

🔹 Fine Motor Skills

Every snap helps children build hand strength, coordination, and control — important pre-writing skills that support school readiness.

🔹 Counting and Maths Concepts

Linking cubes are ideal for counting, comparing, and measuring.
You can invite children to:

  • Count how many cubes they used in their tower or train
  • Make groups of ten
  • Compare which creation is “longer” or “shorter”
  • Try early addition and subtraction (e.g., “Take away two cubes — how many are left?”)

🔹 STEM Learning

These cubes introduce early engineering and design thinking. As children build, balance, and modify their constructions, they’re exploring problem-solving and spatial awareness — essential STEM foundations.

🔹 Colour Recognition and Patterns

You can explore patterns, symmetry, and sequencing (“red-blue-red-blue”) or let children design their own. Pattern play naturally builds early maths and logic skills.

🔹 Creativity and Imagination

There’s no limit to what children can make — from robots to castles to “machines that fly.” Linking cubes encourage open-ended exploration and storytelling through construction play.


🧒 Suitable Ages and Safety

The cubes are best for children aged 3 to 5 years, as they’re small enough to manipulate but large enough for safe play. As always, supervise younger children closely and introduce them gradually if working one-on-one.


💡 Ideas for Educators and Families

  • Create a STEM challenge table (“Who can build the tallest tower?”).
  • Encourage collaborative building projects to support teamwork.
  • Use cubes for measuring classroom objects (chairs, books, even friends’ height!).
  • Combine with literacy — children can “record” their design by drawing it afterwards.

🧩 Final Thoughts

Studymate Linking Cubes are one of my top recommended resources for preschool education, early learning centres, and homeschooling. They combine fun, learning, and creativity in one simple tool.

So next time you’re planning your STEM or fine motor setup — grab a set of linking cubes. You’ll be amazed at what children create and how much they learn through play.

🎥 Watch the full demo here:
👉 Studymate Linking Cubes – Fun STEM Learning for Preschoolers