Tribe Verified

Summer Robotics & Coding Camps for Kids

byBe A RobonautAvailable online and at center in Pitampura, Delhi NCRStarts from4,200 per month (8 sessions)View full gallery

Ditch the screen time and let your child build, code, and innovate this summer. Our hands-on camps turn ideas into real-world robotics projects right here in Delhi.

Our Arduino Car Summer Camp is a 2-week adventure for kids aged 10 and up. They'll build their own line-following and obstacle-avoiding car from scratch.

Our Robotics Summer Camp is a 4-week adventure starting May 19th. It's all about hands-on learning, coding, and building your own robotic car, with a final showcase and certificate.

Here's the plan for Week 1 of our Arduino Car Summer Camp. We'll cover everything from chassis mounting and wiring to basic Arduino programming and car movement.

Week 2 of the Arduino Car Summer Camp is all about smart sensors and racing fun. Kids will learn line following, obstacle avoidance, and Bluetooth control, ending with a mini race day.

Our Arduino Programming & Automation Camp is ideal for ages 9 and up. We focus on creating real-life projects using block coding, making learning intuitive and fun.

For kids aged 7 and up, our summer camp offers a chance to build and code models, and even learn the basics of AI. It's a comprehensive introduction to modern technology.

This is the planner for our Arduino Summer Camp, covering modules on sensors, automation, and real-world projects like smart dustbins and fire alarms.

The final week of our Arduino Summer Camp focuses on smart security systems and final projects, culminating in a project exhibition day for parents and peers.

Week 2 of our Arduino camp is all about touch, sound, and analog control. Students will build projects like a digital piano, a laser guard, and a mood lamp.

For ages 10 and up, we offer Arduino projects with text-based coding, preparing students for more advanced programming and engineering challenges.

About Summer Camps & Workshops

Here, coding isn't just about syntax. It is about letting kids hit a wall, feel the frustration, and then figure out the fix. Whether it is a buggy motor or a line of broken code, I guide them through the mess because that is where the real learning happens. They do not just watch; they build, break, and rebuild until their project actually works.

Similar work from other experts

Browse through Curated picks from other experts on mytribe