🤖 Open Source · Open Hardware

Educational Robotics for the Next Generation

Learn, build, and create with open source robotics. From your first LED blink to autonomous robots — Go Education Project puts real engineering in everyone’s hands.

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Everything You Need to Build Robots

A complete curriculum covering hardware, software, and everything in between — structured for educators and self-learners alike.

Why Open Source & Open Hardware?

At Go Education Project, we believe education should have no barriers. Our robots and curriculum are fully open — every schematic, every line of code, every lesson plan is freely available, forkable, and improvable by anyone.

Open Hardware means you can manufacture your own boards, modify designs for your classroom needs, or build on top of our platform commercially — as long as you share back.

Open Source means transparent, auditable, community-driven software. No black boxes. Students learn by reading and modifying real code.

“The best way to learn engineering is to build real things with real tools.”

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know before you get started

Not at all! Our curriculum starts from absolute zero — no programming, no electronics experience required. We guide you step by step from “What is electricity?” all the way to building autonomous robots.
Our recommended kit uses fully open hardware components available worldwide at low cost. You can also use compatible alternatives — all designs are documented and schematics are publicly available. Check the Hardware Guide for the full list.
Yes! Go Education Project is designed for formal education settings. Lesson plans, assessment guides, and educator resources are all included. Everything is free to use, adapt, and redistribute for educational purposes.
We support Arduino C/C++, MicroPython, and Go (via TinyGo). Beginners start with visual block programming, then progress to text-based code at their own pace.
Yes — all PCB designs, schematics, and BOM files are released under the CERN Open Hardware Licence. You can manufacture, modify, and distribute your own versions, commercially or otherwise.
We welcome all contributions: documentation improvements, translations, bug fixes, new project designs, lesson plans, and more. Check out our GitHub repository and join the community discussion.