Portrait of Njogu Amos

A Technical Mentor.

I mentor young creators (ages 12–17+) in robotics and technology. Turn screen time into innovation time. Engage in practical problem solving.

Move your child from a passive consumer of technology into a future-ready creator.

In a world where children are trained to scroll, I train them to build. One-on-one robotics, IoT, and programming mentorship for the next generation of problem-solvers in Nairobi and surrounding areas.

Book a Free Discovery Call

The Digital Divide Isn't About Access. It's About Creation.

This mentorship is for parents who believe their child has untapped potential—and are ready to invest in unlocking it.

microbit beating heart

In Leading Economies

10-year-olds are learning to talk to machines. They code solutions for real problems in agriculture, water, and security.

Meanwhile, Many of Our Children

Are still waiting until junior secondary to touch a circuit board—if ever. By then, the "inventor's mindset" has often gone dormant.

From First Circuit to Functional Robot.

A Hands-On Journey. This is not theory. This is tinkering, building, failing, and solving. Every concept is tied to a physical object your child can touch and demonstrate.

set-of-electronic-components

Digital Foundations

Your child learns how machines sense the world—light, temperature, motion. They build their first interactive project.

Projects: Digital Thermometer, Security Alarm

a-child-building-electronics

Real Electronics

We move beyond the board. LEDs, buzzers, wires, breadboards. Your child builds a working interactive traffic light.

Projects: Interactive Traffic Light

child-making-a-rover

Automation & Robotics

Now we make things move. Using text-based coding, your child controls motors and servos. The capstone project awaits.

Projects: Smart Plant Waterer, Alarm Bot, Line Following Rover

Beyond the Curriculum

Where Innovation Takes Root

Once the foundation is solid, your child is encouraged to solve problems they actually care about: a smart gate sensor, a room automation system, a security alert for your home.

How It Works

Twice a Week. Personalized. Hybrid. Safe.

I designed this for real families with real schedules and real safety concerns.

For Individual Learners For Small Groups
One-on-one sessions at your home for maximum safety and focus.
Parents can merge 2–4 children to learn together at an approved venue.
Twice per week, scheduled around school and holiday calendars.
Same twice-weekly rhythm, shared energy, reduced individual cost.
Hybrid option: In-person + remote sessions when travel isn't practical.
Ideal for schools, churches, clubs, or neighborhood learning pods.

Every session is hands-on. If your child isn't wiring, coding, or testing something by the 15-minute mark, I'm not doing my job.

This Is an Investment in Your Child's Future, Not an Expense

I am a professional mentor offering structured, high-value technical guidance. This is paid mentorship, not a free volunteer program.

Min Mentorship Fee

KES 1500 per 2hr session, per child (minimum)

Group sessions cost less per child. Price subject to adjustment based on travel distance, session duration, and group size.

What Parents Must Provide

  1. A BBC micro:bit Go Starter Kit — or your child brings one. This is theirs to keep, practice with, and own.
  2. A laptop or computer — Required for writing and uploading code.
  3. Internet access — For research, code resources, and online collaboration.
  4. An Arduino Uno Starter Kit — Required later in the journey for the robotics phase.

Why You Buy the Kit

When a child owns their tools, they practice outside our sessions. They tinker at home. They fail and retry without waiting for a classroom. Ownership breeds mastery. Parents who commit see it as buying their child a skill for life.

Arduino Starter Kit R4

Give Your Child the Spark. Let's Start Building.

Spaces are limited. I take on only a small number of mentees per season to ensure quality.

Frequently Asked Questions

My child has never coded before. Is this too advanced?
Absolutely not. We start with block-based coding on the micro:bit—it's designed for beginners. The focus is on tinkering, not textbooks.
Why do I have to buy the kit? Can't you provide one?
Borrowed kits stay in a box. Owned kits get practiced on at 9 PM on a Tuesday. Ownership is part of the learning psychology.
Do you offer certificates?
No. Your child's certificate is the working device they show you at dinner. That is worth more.
Can two or three parents combine their kids?
Yes. Small groups of 2–4 are excellent for peer learning and reduce the per-family cost. I can meet at a mutually approved home or venue.
Is this only for holidays?
Holiday intensives are the core offering, but term-time sessions are available for committed learners who want continuity.