Contributing partners
These partnerships provide complementary programmes that contribute to the overall offer for teachers and students.
Apps for Good
Apps for Good is an education charity teaching students about new technologies while equipping them with the problem solving, creativity and teamwork skills needed to thrive. They work with schools and colleges, supporting teachers to deliver their free courses to students aged 10-18. Their courses empower young people to create tech solutions, Apps, IoT or Machine Learning products to tackle real-world community problems that they care about.
Barefoot from Computing at School
Barefoot empowers primary school teachers to deliver the computing curriculum brilliantly, with free workshops, helpful online guides and engaging lesson plans and resources. Barefoot makes computing easy to teach and fun to learn, with or without a computer.

Bebras UK
This exciting initiative offers a series of fun and fiendish challenges that introduce students to computational thinking. The questions start (relatively) easy and get progressively more difficult. There are different levels of the challenge available for different school phases, and no previous programming knowledge is required.
Code Club from Raspberry Pi Foundation
Code Club supports a global community of volunteers, educators, and partners to run free coding clubs for 9 to 13 year olds. Our free, step-by-step coding projects offer young people lots of opportunities to be creative and share their creations with each other.
CyberFirst
Part of the National Cyber Security Centre, CyberFirst helps young people, aged 11 to 17, to explore their passion for tech by introducing them to the fast-paced world of cyber security. They offer a broad range of activities which are available for teachers and schools to use. Each activity is designed to give learners the support, skills, experience and exposure needed to be the future first line of defence in our CyberFirst world.

ENTHUSE Charitable Trust
The objectives of the Charity are to advance the education of the public, by fostering and promoting the continuing professional development (CPD) of STEM teachers and other educators of STEM subjects by the provision of grants and bursaries to schools, education service providers and any organisation that promotes, arranges or organises courses and meetings which provide CPD to STEM educators.

Institute of Coding
The Institute of Coding brings together employers, educators and outreach partners to engage a diverse group of people into tech careers through higher education. Their consortium has developed a variety of digital skills courses, many of which are free and online, so that more people can find an education pathway to fit their interests and needs. If you are interested in learning more, visit our course catalogue to view the full list of our 200+ digital skills courses.
Micro:bit Educational Foundation
The Micro:bit Educational Foundation is a UK-based not for profit organisation with a mission to ‘inspire every child to create their best digital future’. We help children participate in the digital world, with particular focus on girls and those from disadvantaged groups. We work in collaboration with educators to create and curate exceptional curriculum materials, training programmes, classroom tools and free resources.

Royal Academy of Engineering
The education team at the Royal Academy of Engineering aims to address the shortage of engineers and technicians in the UK, as well as the diversity of the workforce, by developing teachers’ knowledge and skills and helping them to incorporate engineering into their lessons. Teachers can join the Connecting STEM teachers network, to improve perceptions of engineering amongst young people and underrepresented groups, or access free curriculum resources.
STEM Ambassadors
STEM Ambassadors help you bring computing to life in the classroom. With over 30,000 volunteers, including computing professionals, they are a fantastic free resource for schools. STEM Ambassadors can help in many areas from running code clubs, giving practical demonstrations, or giving a careers talk, to help break down some of the stereotypes around computing professionals.
UK Safer Internet Centre
UK Safer Internet Centre is a partnership of three charities (SWGfL, IWF and Childnet) with a mission to make the internet a better place for young people. One of the 32 national centres of the European Insafe network - they provide advice, support, and coordinate Safer Internet Day across the UK. The Centre supports professionals working with young people with online safety issues, and offers a safe place to report and remove child sexual abuse content.