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Building Problem-Solving Skills Through Play: The Six Bricks Approach

Building Problem-Solving Skills: How Six Bricks Helps Children Learn

Posted on: February 23, 2026 by the Six Bricks Learning Content Team

Problem-solving is one of the most powerful skills a child can develop. From navigating playground disagreements to figuring out why a structure collapsed, children are constantly encountering challenges that shape how they think and respond.

When children learn to approach problems calmly and creatively, they build confidence, resilience, and independence. The earlier these skills are nurtured, the stronger their foundation becomes — not only academically, but socially and emotionally too.

The good news? Problem-solving doesn’t require worksheets or pressure. It grows naturally through hands-on, playful learning experiences, especially when supported by structured tools like the Six Bricks Method.

Child engaging in hands-on problem solving.

What Are Problem-Solving Skills?

Problem-solving skills are the thinking tools children use to:

  • recognise a challenge
  • analyse what’s happening
  • consider possible solutions
  • choose a response
  • reflect on the outcome

Whether a child is rebuilding a fallen tower, negotiating a turn, or adapting when plans change, they are strengthening the mental muscles needed for life. Problem solving is not about getting everything right — it’s about learning how to think.

Why Problem-Solving Skills Matter in Early Childhood

Problem-solving is deeply connected to many areas of development:

Cognitive Development

Children practise:

  • critical thinking
  • pattern recognition
  • logical reasoning
  • memory and sequencing

Emotional Growth

As children navigate frustration or disappointment, they learn to:

  • regulate emotions
  • persist through challenges
  • develop resilience

Social Skills

Problem-solving strengthens:

  • communication
  • compromise
  • collaboration
  • empathy

Creativity

Open-ended challenges encourage children to experiment, test ideas, and invent solutions. Play-based problem solving strengthens all these skills at once — without pressure.

The Six Bricks Problem-Solving Process

Children don’t need complicated frameworks. A simple, repeatable structure works best. Here’s a child-friendly problem-solving pathway that can be integrated into Six Bricks activities:

  • Step 1: Spot the Challenge – “What’s not working?” (Example: My structure keeps falling.)
  • Step 2: Explore the Situation – “What might be causing it?” (Is the base too small? Are pieces uneven?)
  • Step 3: Think of Ideas – “What else could I try?” (Wider base? Different stacking order? Fewer bricks?)
  • Step 4: Choose and Try – Select one idea and test it.
  • Step 5: Reflect – Did it work? What could I change next time?

This playful cycle teaches children that mistakes are part of learning.

Child focused on a Six Bricks building challenge.

Problem-Solving Development by Age

Toddlers (2–3 Years)

At this stage, problem solving happens through movement and exploration.

  • Trial and error (trying different ways to stack bricks)
  • Physical experimentation (pushing, pulling, balancing)
  • Beginning language to ask for help

Six Bricks Example: Encourage toddlers to stack bricks freely and explore what makes them fall or stay upright.

Preschoolers (4–5 Years)

Children begin understanding cause and effect.

  • Simple puzzle solving
  • Sharing and turn-taking
  • Pretend play with story sequences

Six Bricks Example: Challenge them to build a pattern and explain what comes next.

Early Primary (6–8 Years)

Logical thinking strengthens.

  • Understanding fairness and rules
  • Working collaboratively
  • Identifying patterns and systems

Six Bricks Example: Build a structure that must meet two rules (e.g., must include three colours and stand independently).

Older Children (9–12 Years)

Abstract thinking emerges.

  • Exploring multiple solutions
  • Considering others’ perspectives
  • Planning ahead

Six Bricks Example: Design a bridge structure with limited bricks and evaluate improvements.

Teens

Problem solving becomes reflective and strategic.

  • Weighing pros and cons
  • Long-term thinking
  • Self-evaluation

Six Bricks activities can still support executive functioning through timed challenges and rule-based design tasks.

Close up of a child using fine motor skills to solve a puzzle.

Six Bricks Activities to Strengthen Problem-Solving

1. Rescue the Structure

Build a small structure and gently knock part of it down. Ask the child to rebuild using a different strategy. Skills developed: Adaptability, structural reasoning, emotional resilience.

2. Tallest Tower Challenge

Using only six bricks, build the tallest stable tower possible. Encourage children to test different base designs and reflect on why some towers fall. Skills developed: Hypothesis testing, analytical thinking, patience.

3. Limited Resources Challenge

Provide only six bricks. Ask children to create something meaningful (a house, animal, vehicle). Limitations boost creativity and flexible thinking.

4. Build a Bridge

Create a structure that can hold a small object. Test it. If it collapses, redesign it. Discuss: What made it strong? What made it unstable?

5. The “Move It” Team Challenge

Set a rule-based challenge (e.g., move bricks across the room without using hands). This encourages teamwork, creative strategy, and negotiation.

Why Six Bricks Works So Well for Problem Solving

The Six Bricks Method is powerful because it is:

  • Simple
  • Structured
  • Short in duration
  • Repeatable
  • Inclusive

The limited number of bricks encourages deeper thinking rather than overwhelming choice. Children focus on strategy rather than quantity. The predictability of routines helps reduce anxiety while increasing engagement — particularly helpful for neurodiverse learners.

Key Takeaways

  • Problem-solving is a foundational life skill.
  • Play-based learning strengthens cognitive, emotional, and social development.
  • A simple step-by-step process builds confidence.
  • Limiting materials increases creative thinking.
  • Six Bricks provides a structured yet flexible tool for developing problem-solving skills at any age.

Frequently Asked Questions

What age should we start teaching problem-solving skills?
From toddler years. Even simple stacking and trial-and-error activities build foundational thinking.

What if my child gets frustrated easily?
Model calm reflection. Show that mistakes are part of learning. Keep activities short and achievable.

Can Six Bricks be used in classrooms for problem-solving development?
Yes. The method aligns well with curriculum outcomes and supports executive functioning, numeracy, and collaboration.

Is this suitable for neurodiverse learners?
Absolutely. The hands-on and predictable nature of Six Bricks activities supports inclusive participation.

About the Author

Six Bricks Learning supports educators and families in building core developmental skills through structured, play-based methodologies that foster confidence, curiosity, and lifelong learning.

Strengthen Skills Through Play

Ready to strengthen your child’s problem-solving skills through purposeful play? Explore Six Bricks activities and discover how just six bricks can unlock creative thinking, resilience, and confidence.

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