Our method

How we teach

Every course is built backwards from one moment: a child demonstrating something real to an applauding room.

The three tests

Every course has to pass all three

Before a course makes the catalogue, it has to clear three bars — one for the child, one for the parent, one for the showcase.

The schoolyard test

A child can explain the course to a friend in one sentence and sound cool. "I trained an AI to spot fakes." "I built my own chatbot." If it needs the word "curriculum", it fails.

The dinner-party test

A parent can explain it to another parent and sound wise. "She's training her own AI — she actually understands how it learns." That sentence is why parents re-enrol.

The show-off test

Every course ends in something that can be demonstrated live — played against, queried, or fooled. An AI the audience can't trick sells the next term; a worksheet does not.

The sprint engine

  1. Sprint 1 — Foundations

    Fast wins: the core tools and vocabulary, learned inside something that already runs by the end of week four.

  2. Sprint 2 — Build

    The real project takes shape, with weekly playtests or code-review circles run like a small studio.

  3. Sprint 3 — Ship & polish

    Scope is cut to finish; the project is polished, documented and rehearsed for the audience.

  4. Week 13 — Showcase

    Tæknisýningin: every child demonstrates what they built to a live audience of families.

Tæknipassinn — the badge book

Every student carries a badge book across every course: stamps, levels and belts that make progress visible. Levelling up is the mechanic every game has taught them to crave — and 'two stamps from the next level' is a sentence parents hear in the car.

See the courses

Why every term ends in a showcase

Tæknisýningin is the emotional finale and the engine of the whole method. Designing every course backwards from a live demonstration is what keeps the learning real — and what gives families a reason to come back. (Photos and video will live here once we have consent-cleared footage.)

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Small groups, real instructors

Group sizes are deliberately small so every child gets help when they're stuck and a challenge when they're flying. For the youngest band there are two adults in every room. Curiosity is the only prerequisite.

About us

See the method in action.

The first lesson is a free trial.

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