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Holiday Science Camps for Kids in Bengaluru

byFun in ScienceScience Center at Basavanagar, BengaluruView full gallery

Forget boring lectures. In our holiday camps, your child becomes the scientist—building circuits, crafting catapults, and testing physics theories by doing, not just watching.

A recap of our May summer camp where we explored everything from mechanics with catapults, to biology with a circulatory system model, and electronics with eddy current brakes. Every day brought a new concept to life.

This video montage shows the day-by-day progress in one of our camps. We started with anti-gravity illusions, moved on to building circuits, and ended with exploring the properties of light in a dark room.

Our camps cover a wide range of scientific fields. Here you can see students building a hydro-powered mill, creating their own pan flutes to learn about sound, and testing for sugar in different solutions.

Teamwork makes the dream work. Students collaborate during a summer camp session, carefully assembling the components for a DIY metal detector.

Success! A student tests the metal detector he built during our summer camp. This project is a great introduction to understanding circuits and electromagnetism.

The joy of seeing your own creation light up for the first time. These students are testing the circuits they built during a hands-on session at our camp.

A glimpse into our summer camp session held in partnership with Global Art. Here, young learners are creating their own color-changing LED globes.

About this collection

In our holiday camps, your child doesn't just watch experiments; they build them. We spend 80% of our time hands-on with real tools like screwdrivers, wire strippers, and glue guns, so every student leaves with a working model—like a hydraulic crane or a functional metal detector—that they built from scratch.

Science should be wild and messy, not stuck in a textbook. Whether it's a Summer break or a Dasara holiday, our camps are designed to let kids (ages 4 to 14) experiment with the things they see in the real world. We break our sessions into age-appropriate groups: 'Science Juniors' for the little ones (4-7) and 'Science Squad' for the older explorers (7-12+).

Why Our Camps Are Different

We skip the theory-first approach. Instead, we start with the 'build'. If we are learning about light, we don't just talk about reflection; we build a shadow projection box. If the topic is magnetism, we create an electromagnetic crane.

What Your Child Gets

  • Working Take-Home Models: Every day brings a new project. From potato batteries to robotic rovers, kids bring home a functioning device they constructed themselves.
  • Tool Confidence: We teach them how to handle hobby-grade motors, wire strippers, and basic electronics safely.
  • Small Batches: We keep groups small (usually 8-15 kids) so every child gets direct, one-on-one guidance when they get stuck.

Exploring STEM Topics

Our curriculum covers the full spectrum of science for kids, aligned with school concepts but executed through DIY projects:

  • Electronics: Circuits, simple switches, and robotics.
  • Physics: Forces, motion, energy, and light properties.
  • Chemistry: Safe reactions, identifying proteins, and polymers.

These camps aren't just a place to drop your kids off. It is an incubator for curiosity where they learn that failure is just part of the testing process. Whether it is our 5-day holiday camp or our intensive 10-day boot camps, the goal is simple: helping your child understand how the world works by building it themselves.

Trusted by Bengaluru parents for hands-on science.Approved by the tribe
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Fun in Science

Science Center at Basavanagar, BengaluruStarting ₹350 per child per workshop

We are Fun in Science, and we think textbooks are just the starting point. We believe if a child builds a circuit or a catapult with their own hands, they do not need to memorize a formula—they have already lived the science.

Looking for a different science activity?

Explore our other workshops by theme, age group, or project type.