
LEGO Education Launches First-Ever Home STEM Kits
LEGO Education is bringing hands-on science learning home for the first time with four new STEM kits that help kids discover answers to their biggest questions. The move comes as research shows 75% of parents feel unprepared to answer their children's science questions.
Kids asking "Why?" just got a powerful new tool, and parents everywhere are breathing a sigh of relief.
LEGO Education launched four new STEM kits designed specifically for home use, marking the first time the educational brand has moved beyond classroom walls. The sets target children aged 7 and up, focusing on space exploration and wildlife to spark curiosity through hands-on building.
The timing couldn't be better. New research across six countries reveals what LEGO calls a "curiosity gap." While 57% of parents say their child's questions frequently surprise them, one in three admit they sometimes shut down exploration simply because they don't know the answers. Three out of four parents say they feel unprepared to tackle science questions at home.
"Parents want to support their children's curiosity about the world around them but aren't always equipped to explain science-specific questions themselves," said Victor Saeijs, President of LEGO Education. The new kits solve this problem by letting kids explore independently.
Each set uses a "Build, Solve, Invent" approach that turns learning into adventure. Children first build challenges following instructions, then test and tweak their creations to solve problems, and finally apply what they've learned to invent their own solutions. No parent PhD required.

British explorer Steve Backshall partnered with LEGO to demonstrate the kits' potential. "My understanding of the natural world and science largely comes from venturing into uncharted territories and hands-on exploration," he said. The sets bring that same spirit of discovery into living rooms.
The Ripple Effect
This launch represents more than new toys on shelves. It acknowledges a real gap in how families approach learning at home and provides a bridge between children's natural curiosity and meaningful scientific understanding.
By designing sets that work independently, LEGO removes pressure from parents while giving kids the confidence to experiment, fail, and try again. The four kits cover moon missions, Antarctic animals, Mars exploration, and Arctic wildlife, with prices ranging from $49.99 to $99.99.
The message is simple but powerful: every attempt, even unexpected ones, contributes to learning. For families navigating the endless stream of "why" questions, that's transformative.
When curiosity meets the right tools, kids become scientists in their own homes.
Based on reporting by Google: scientific discovery
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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