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Robotics “Build Yourself” — Bothell, June 22–26
Picture your child crouching on the floor, watching a robot they just programmed dodge an obstacle — then jumping up to fix the code when it clips a corner. Over five days, children program real Codey Rocky and other robots using mBlock (block-based coding built on MIT Scratch), working through sensors, loops, and conditionals — not on worksheets, but by making a physical robot do something and seeing what actually happens. Every session starts with a sketch in the Designer Notebook before anyone touches code. By Friday, they’re writing programs that navigate a maze on their own.
Robotics “Build Yourself” — Bothell, July 20–24
Picture your child crouching on the floor, watching a robot they just programmed dodge an obstacle — then jumping up to fix the code when it clips a corner. Over five days, children program real Codey Rocky and other robots using mBlock (block-based coding built on MIT Scratch), working through sensors, loops, and conditionals — not on worksheets, but by making a physical robot do something and seeing what actually happens. Every session starts with a sketch in the Designer Notebook before anyone touches code. By Friday, they’re writing programs that navigate a maze on their own.
Robotics Program “Build Yourself” — Bellevue, Aug 10–14
Picture your child crouching on the floor, watching a robot they just programmed dodge an obstacle — then jumping up to fix the code when it clips a corner. Over five days, children program real Codey Rocky and other robots using mBlock (block-based coding built on MIT Scratch), working through sensors, loops, and conditionals — not on worksheets, but by making a physical robot do something and seeing what actually happens. Every session starts with a sketch in the Designer Notebook before anyone touches code. By Friday, they’re writing programs that navigate a maze on their own.
Robotics “Build Yourself” — Bothell, August 17–21
Picture your child crouching on the floor, watching a robot they just programmed dodge an obstacle — then jumping up to fix the code when it clips a corner. Over five days, children program real Codey Rocky and other robots using mBlock (block-based coding built on MIT Scratch), working through sensors, loops, and conditionals — not on worksheets, but by making a physical robot do something and seeing what actually happens. Every session starts with a sketch in the Designer Notebook before anyone touches code. By Friday, they’re writing programs that navigate a maze on their own.
Book More, Save More
Multi-camp pricing is per family — siblings count! Mix any camp types or locations.
How It Works
Bringing a friend? Ask the new family to mention your name in the referral or comment field during registration. Both families get $50 off.