
Students Build AI Robots at Delhi School's ROBOCON 2026
Young innovators at Elate International School showcased homemade robots, AI projects, and drones they built to solve real-world problems. Their creations included a robotic dog named Turo and a humanoid robot called Nila.
Students at a Delhi school just proved that the future of robotics isn't just being studied in textbooks. It's being built by kids with big ideas and steady hands.
Elate International School hosted ROBOCON 2026 on February 7, transforming their campus into a showcase of student-designed robots and artificial intelligence projects. The young creators didn't just display their work. They confidently explained how each innovation worked and what problems it could solve.
The star attractions included Turo, a robotic dog, and Nila, a humanoid robot, both designed and programmed by students. Drone demonstrations filled the air while smaller robotic models lined the exhibition floor. Each project represented months of coding, problem-solving, and hands-on engineering by students learning to turn classroom concepts into real technology.
Parents watched as their children walked them through complex robotics concepts with surprising clarity. The students spoke about artificial intelligence applications, mechanical design, and programming languages the same way they might discuss their favorite subjects. Their presentations revealed not just technical knowledge but genuine excitement about creating solutions through technology.

Why This Inspires
This exhibition represents a shift in how schools approach STEM education. Instead of memorizing facts about technology, students at Elate International School are becoming creators themselves. They're learning that innovation isn't something that happens later in life or only in university labs.
The confidence these young inventors displayed matters as much as their technical skills. When children see themselves as problem-solvers and creators before they even reach high school, they develop a mindset that will serve them throughout their careers. They're not intimidated by emerging technology because they're already building it.
Schools across India are watching initiatives like ROBOCON 2026 as models for integrating practical technology education into standard curricula. The exhibition showed that when students get their hands on real tools and tackle genuine challenges, they rise to the occasion with remarkable creativity.
The next generation of engineers, programmers, and innovators is already building the future, one robot at a time.
Based on reporting by Google: robotics innovation
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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