STEAM stands for Science, Technology, Engineering, ARTS and Maths.

Transforming Family Learning at your school

STEAM Team 2026 is an innovative programme transforming how families engage with coding and digital skills in County Meath primary schools. It builds STEAM capacity through meaningful parental engagement, confidence-building, and fun OurKidsCode workshops. Our STEAM Team model is designed to support schools while minimising demands on school staff and building greater capacity in school community for adopting the new STEM curriculum.

Places limited to 20 primary schools across County Meath.  Fully funded programme, open for applications until noon on

Feb 24th 2026

What is Steam Team?

OurKidsCode Model

The OurKidsCode model fosters a positive attitude towards creative coding amongst primary school families. We are a non-profit research project based in Trinity College Dublin, funded by Research Ireland.

All of our work in OurKidsCode is research-led. We care deeply about meaningful, fun learning experiences for the whole family. We have learnt that positive support and engagement between parents and school staff really helps to get OurKidsCode off the ground in a new location.

Read: OurKidsCode Impact Report 2021-24

STEAM Team Model

A STEAM Team is a school-based steering group that brings together school staff, parents, and children to intentionally plan for and promote STEAM activities within their specific school context.

For 2026, with new funding from Meath County Council (supported by META community grant), our research focus is to develop a new model for home/school collaboration to support the development of an OurKidsCode club (and other STEAM initiatives) in primary schools.

Key functions of a STEAM Team:

  • Planning STEAM initiatives suited to their school community
  • Promoting programmes like OurKidsCode
  • Planning for celebrations and showcase events
  • Building sustainable parental leadership

What Makes this Different?

Parent-Led
School-Supported

Unlike other STEM programmes that rely on teacher delivery, STEAM Team empowers parents to lead with school coordination and support

After-school
Family-based

Learning happens outside school hours, bringing families together rather than adding to curriculum time

Complementary
not Competitive

Designed to work alongside existing programmes like DreamSpace and Lego League, filling the parental engagement gap rather than competing for resources

Research Backed

Trinity College Dublin partnership ensures rigorous evaluation and contributes to national policy development


The Power of "A" in STEAM

The Arts make STEM more creative, inclusive, and accessible.

For primary-aged learners, this approach helps complex subjects feel engaging rather than intimidating. Art encourages design thinking, problem-solving, communication, and imagination — essential skills that help children understand and apply STEM concepts with confidence.

In our OurKidsCode creative coding workshops, children also develop collaboration and a strong design mindset, alongside open communication. Empathy is woven into the learning experience by encouraging participants to support other families and peers once they have completed their own tasks.

How it All Works

The STEAM Team model works alongside the OurKidsCode model in two phases over the school academic year from beginning to end.

MAR
ZOOM CALL

Welcome Zoom call for new schools onboarded on this programme

STEAM Team 01

OurKidsCode Facilitator meets School Reps

Recruit two parents for next meeting

STEAM Team 02

Plan first Taster workshop

Invite 2 students to next meeting

APR
FIRST TASTER WORKSHOP

Fun 2-hour STEAM session
led by OurKidsCode

STEAM Team 03

Plan up to 3 more Tasters

Promote them, supported by the school

MAY
MORE TASTER WORKSHOPS

OurKidsCode delivers up to 3 more Taster workshops (6 families per workshop)

STEAM Team 04

Review Tasters

How many families are interested in “Start a Club” in September?

Plan the next steps - Zoom call

ZOOM CALL

Zoom call to plan "What's next?" when Phase II begins in September

SUMMER BREAK

PHASE I ENDS

SEP
ZOOM CALL

Kick off Zoom to begin Phase II

STEAM Team 05

Everyone regroups and focuses on START A CLUB programme

OCT
START A CLUB

6 MeetUps take place from end of September through November with families completing various creative coding activities

STEAM Team 06

Work towards milestones for the new club

Plan STEAM Showcase

SCHOOL EVENT

OurKidsCode and STEAM Team come together to create a mini STEAM showcase in the school

NOV
STEAM SHOWCASE

All the STEAM learning over two phases culminates in the Showcase

Key Benefits of this Programme

Benefits for Schools

Direct curriculum support: Helps meet new STEM specifications without adding teaching workload

Meaningful parental engagement: Brings in families who don’t typically participate

Minimal staff time: Teachers connect and coordinate, not deliver; strategic role for principals, not operational

Sustainable model: Parent-led resource with potential to continue beyond direct OurKidsCode involvement

Research partnership: Contribute to national educational policy; gain academic credibility

Benefits for Families

Skill building: Builds IT confidence; prepares children for the digital world

Quality time: Real bonding through active learning together 

Social connection: Builds new friendships; strengthens parent networks and the school community 

Accessible entry: No special tech experience needed; informal, relaxed atmosphere 

Leadership roles: Parents and children become STEAM champions; older children act as peer leaders 

Eligibility & the Application Process

Who can apply?

  • Primary schools in County Meath
  • Maximum of 20 schools (fully funded)
  • Primarily 3rd and 4th class (ages 8-10)


Why Primary school children?

 

Through our pilots and advisory group expertisewe’ve learnt that 3rd and 4th class (ages 8-10) is the sweet spot for this work. Younger children still genuinely enjoy learning with their parents, before the natural independence-seeking behaviour of older children kicks in. Starting at this age also gives families a longer journey together through primary school. 

FAQs

OurKidsCode is a research project based in Trinity College Dublin that increases parental involvement and promotes diversity in computer education by providing STEAM opportunities for families with primary-aged children, particularly in underserved and rural communities. 

Whilst OurKidsCode provides the after-school family learning activities, the STEAM Team operates as the strategic planning and steering support structure within the school environment. 

The STEAM Team promotes and supports OurKidsCode in their school, helping recruit new families, plan showcase events, and perhaps integrate OurKidsCode learning into the broader school community. However, the STEAM Team can also discuss and plan for other STEAM initiatives beyond OurKidsCode, giving schools ownership over their STEAM vision. 

Whilst designed as a whole family experience, the programme specifically targets parents, recognising that parental involvement in children’s learning significantly benefits both the parent-child relationship and future learning outcomes. Many families continue meeting independently in their local community centres, libraries, or schools after initial facilitated sessions. 

Up to 6 families can take part in each workshop and the whole family can participate together.  We actively encourage parents to bring along younger and older siblings to join in.

A Taster workshop takes approximately 2 hours and takes place outside of school hours.  

Yes! This programme directly supports implementation of the new STEM curriculum specifications. When most of a class participates with their parents, children gain confidence that transfers to classroom lessons, and parents become equipped to support STEM homework. 

Your role is strategic, not operational. We need you to: 

  • Champion the programme and connect us with the right teacher contacts 

  • Support family recruitment through your communication channels 

  • Provide space and facility access 

  • Be part of reviewing progress with your school STEAM Team 

We’ve heard clearly from teachers in our pilots: you want to support this work through connection and coordination roles, not facilitation. 

You WILL be asked to: 

  • Help identify and recruit families who would benefit 

  • Connect families to resources and handle basic logistics 

  • Potentially observe workshops if interested 

  • Be part of the school STEAM Team 

  •  

You will NOT be expected to: 

  • Facilitate coding workshops 

  • Have technical expertise in coding 

  • Add this to your teaching workload 

  • Take on responsibility when parent volunteers aren’t available 

  •  

Applications for this programme are allocated using a stratified selection process designed to ensure fair geographic representation and diversity across County Meath. As a research project, we will aim to achieve balanced participation across Meath’s six Municipal Districts (Ashbourne, Kells, Laytown-Bettystown, Navan, Ratoath, and Trim), and schools with the greatest scope to increase their engagement in STEAM activities. 

Selection criteria include geographic location, school characteristics such as DEIS designation, school size, rural location, and language of instruction, as well as STEAM participation status. With a limited number of places available, not all eligible schools can be accommodated. Applications are assessed against transparent criteria to maximise diversity and research value. All selection decisions are final. Schools will be notified of outcomes by 2nd March 2026.  For queries email contact@ourkidscode.ie

Turn your school into a STEAM SCHOOL!

Partners & Funders

This programme is brought to you by the OurkidsCode team in the School of Computer Science & Statistics in Trinity College Dublin. We are delighted to be developing this new STEAM Team model in partnership with Meath County Council, funded by a META community grant, but we can’t do it without you! Principals, teachers, OurKidsCode facilitators, parents and children are all active co-creators in our programme.