About Stemigo

We are a resource for parents rising curious thoughtful kids, with practical help for the very modern chaos that comes with it.

We write about education and tech, mostly where they collide with each other and with whatever your kid is currently obsessed with. We don't have all the answers, but we do research and sharing what we found.

The world is moving fast. AI is now in everything, STEM feels like a buzzword, and somehow your child has become the resident expert on volcanoes, black holes, and that cool new robot. You already have way too many science experiment kits gathering dust at home. And just when you've got past that, they want a maths game on your phone, or a puzzle for the back of the car.

Every week there's a new app, a new podcast, a new maths game, a new thing you're supposed to know about. Nobody has time for all of it.

So we research, prioritise, and share a balanced, practical view on what can spark interest. Clear, straightforward writing for busy parents who want to support their kids and occasionally hold their own at dinner.

If you want a starting point, our writing lives in three hubs: robotics, astronomy, and science and math.

We're also building apps: games, puzzles, a maths helper, with more on the way. The goal is a collection of useful tool for every topic your child gets curious about or needs help with. If there's something you wish existed, email us at hello@stemigo.org. We read everything, and it shapes what we build next.

Our Approach

We publish carefully, update thoughtfully, and prioritise trust over reach. We research with AI to help explore ideas and surface a range of viewpoints.

Stemigo publishes under a small set of bylines, each one a consistent voice covering a particular beat: robotics, astronomy, maths, science at home, kid-tech reviews. The bylines are editorial personas, not individual people. We chose this structure because it keeps the writing consistent and lets us cover more ground.

Where research exists, we read it and link to it. Where it doesn't, we say so. We try to name our sources rather than gesture at "studies show." When experts disagree, we tell you they disagree rather than pretending there's a consensus. If we get something wrong and you tell us, we'll fix it and note what changed at the bottom of the piece.

Everything on Stemigo is free to read. There are no paid subscriptions and no restricted content.

How you can help

Two things we're looking for right now.

  • If you run an Instagram account in the parenting, education, or kids-and-tech space and our writing fits what you share, we'd like to talk about partnering.
  • If you've got something you'd like to write, a take, a review, a piece you wish existed, send us a pitch.

We read everything, you are welcome to email hello@stemigo.org.

Thank you for spending time here.