About
theCoderSchool Coding Camps offer hands-on coding projects such as video game development, robotics, Minecraft coding, Roblox game creation, JavaScript with HTML/CSS, mobile game development, and Python utilities and games. Campers can build playable games, design and develop games in 3D environments, build websites using HTML/CSS and JavaScript, create and publish a Roblox game including an Obby (obstacle course) in Roblox Studio while learning Lua, and work on mobile app development to build apps that run on a simulator and an actual phone. Some camps include controlling and coding movements of physical robots, building robots at some locations, building a computer with Raspberry Pi and programming it with Python or Scratch, exploring AI and ChatGPT basics, creating AI image recognition bots, coding algorithms that mimic computer intelligence, advanced Java coding, Arduino microcontroller projects with components such as LEDs and sensors, and 3D printing to design and print physical objects.
• Ages: 8–18 years old
• Schedule: Each day camp runs for a full week, usually starting mid-morning and finishing early afternoon, with some camps offered as a half-day.
Camp sessions are offered as in-person coding camps in cool startup-vibe locations, and theCoderSchool also offers after-school coding classes, online spring break camp, Scratch camp, Private+Semi-Private Coaching, virtual learning, and coding classes that include robotics, Python, Scratch, and video game coding. The program uses a low-ratio of students per coach and a Code Coaches® mentoring philosophy, with a super-small student to teacher ratio (typically 2:1) in the core program and personalized, customized instruction based on students. Each camp has recommendations around age and skill level but is open to discussion based on the child’s coding experience, and students give demos at the end of the week to show their work and critical thinking skills. Some locations allow kids to bring their robots home at the end of camp, and some may include the Raspberry Pi computer to bring home.
Camp instructors are Code Coaches® who have successfully gone through theCoderSchool’s onboarding process and are coders who know how to teach coding skills to kids. The program’s mission statement is: “The future will be ever more dependent on technology so let's get our young generation ready. Learn to Code, Change the World®.” Founded in 2014 and headquartered in Silicon Valley, and also described as founded in 2013 as the first of many and the largest in Silicon Valley with more locations on the way around the country, theCoderSchool runs an App Gallery showcasing student projects and a National Top App of the Month program that selects the best app each month from hundreds submitted nationwide by its students. The organization has authored books in collaboration with Simon Basher from Basher Books and offers AppStream, an online weekly video format for new coders, along with interactive, hands-on STEM learning experiences intended to give students skills they can use for years.
As a longtime partner of the Congressional App Challenge (CAC), theCoderSchool supports coding innovation across the country, and beginning in 2025–2026 it plans to collaborate with CAC to run a national recognition program to identify a handful of top applications from thousands of CAC submissions nationwide. Parent testimonials describe customized curriculum for STEM concepts via coding, engaging online classes, an online spring break camp where a student “really learned a lot” and enjoyed creating games, and strong interest in Scratch camp, with parents from New Jersey, California, Georgia, and Connecticut sharing these experiences.
Last updated December 29, 2025.
• Ages: 8–18 years old
• Schedule: Each day camp runs for a full week, usually starting mid-morning and finishing early afternoon, with some camps offered as a half-day.
Camp sessions are offered as in-person coding camps in cool startup-vibe locations, and theCoderSchool also offers after-school coding classes, online spring break camp, Scratch camp, Private+Semi-Private Coaching, virtual learning, and coding classes that include robotics, Python, Scratch, and video game coding. The program uses a low-ratio of students per coach and a Code Coaches® mentoring philosophy, with a super-small student to teacher ratio (typically 2:1) in the core program and personalized, customized instruction based on students. Each camp has recommendations around age and skill level but is open to discussion based on the child’s coding experience, and students give demos at the end of the week to show their work and critical thinking skills. Some locations allow kids to bring their robots home at the end of camp, and some may include the Raspberry Pi computer to bring home.
Camp instructors are Code Coaches® who have successfully gone through theCoderSchool’s onboarding process and are coders who know how to teach coding skills to kids. The program’s mission statement is: “The future will be ever more dependent on technology so let's get our young generation ready. Learn to Code, Change the World®.” Founded in 2014 and headquartered in Silicon Valley, and also described as founded in 2013 as the first of many and the largest in Silicon Valley with more locations on the way around the country, theCoderSchool runs an App Gallery showcasing student projects and a National Top App of the Month program that selects the best app each month from hundreds submitted nationwide by its students. The organization has authored books in collaboration with Simon Basher from Basher Books and offers AppStream, an online weekly video format for new coders, along with interactive, hands-on STEM learning experiences intended to give students skills they can use for years.
As a longtime partner of the Congressional App Challenge (CAC), theCoderSchool supports coding innovation across the country, and beginning in 2025–2026 it plans to collaborate with CAC to run a national recognition program to identify a handful of top applications from thousands of CAC submissions nationwide. Parent testimonials describe customized curriculum for STEM concepts via coding, engaging online classes, an online spring break camp where a student “really learned a lot” and enjoyed creating games, and strong interest in Scratch camp, with parents from New Jersey, California, Georgia, and Connecticut sharing these experiences.
Last updated December 29, 2025.
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