How we teach
Every course is built backwards from one moment: a child demonstrating something real to an applauding room.
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
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Sprint 1 — Foundations
Fast wins: the core tools and vocabulary, learned inside something that already runs by the end of week four.
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Sprint 2 — Build
The real project takes shape, with weekly playtests or code-review circles run like a small studio.
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Sprint 3 — Ship & polish
Scope is cut to finish; the project is polished, documented and rehearsed for the audience.
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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 coursesWhy 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.)
Book a free trialSmall 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