Where Curiosity
Gets Its
Hands Dirty.
A workshop-bench STEM blog for homeschool parents building curricula, science teachers sneaking creativity into standards, and kids who take apart every appliance in the house.
↳ 847 makers already on the list
Find Your Bench
For Teachers
↳ scroll down to explore
Lesson plans that make thermodynamics click, rubrics that reward the question not just the answer, and experiments that work in a 28-student classroom with a $40 supply budget.
Jump to For Teachers section →Coming soon:
- ✦Sneaking creativity into standardized frameworks
- ✦Project-based units: bridges, circuits, rockets
- ✦Assessment ideas that celebrate process
- ✦Classroom-tested demos with cheap materials
- ✦Cross-curricular STEM + art + writing hooks
First Dispatches
from the bench.
A preview of what's coming when Tinker opens its doors. Every post will be field-tested before it's published.
Synthesizer from Scratch: A 13-Year-Old's Field Notes
Eight weeks, one breadboard, and more burnt resistors than either of us want to admit. Here's what actually happened when Maya decided to build a sound machine.

Thermodynamics Finally Clicked
How a can-crusher demo and a bag of ice changed the way Room 14 understands heat transfer.
The Backyard Astronomy Curriculum
Six weeks of night-sky observation, constellation mapping, and one very cold November.

One Hour, One Cardboard Box
No instructions. No kit. Just scissors, tape, and the question: can you build something that moves?
A Real Experiment,
Unfolding.
Not a polished tutorial. A documentary. Every post on Tinker will follow the actual process — including the parts that don't work.

Step 01 — The Question
Can we make a speaker from scratch?
Theo, age 12, walks into his garage with a magnet, some wire, and a question he found in a library book from 1987. His mom gives him 45 minutes before dinner.

Step 02 — The Mess
Everything goes sideways (on purpose)
First attempt: the coil is too tight. Second: the magnet is too weak. Third: the whole thing buzzes like an angry wasp. None of this is failure. All of this is data.

Step 03 — The Click
The moment it hums
Iteration seven. He holds the coil over the magnet, connects the leads, and puts his phone against it. A tinny, beautiful, unmistakable sound. He made that.
The People
Behind the Bench.

Dr. Priya Chandrasekaran
Science Teacher, Grade 7
Roosevelt Middle School, Portland OR
Taught physics for 11 years. Still gets excited about pendulums. Currently sneaking engineering design into every unit whether the standards call for it or not.

Marcus Webb
Homeschool Parent & Engineer
Homeschooling since 2019, Austin TX
Mechanical engineer by day, curriculum builder by necessity. Learned to homeschool the hard way — by doing it wrong first, then writing about it.

Aiko Tanaka
Student Contributor, Age 14
Homeschooled, Seattle WA
Has disassembled two blenders, one radio, and a printer. Currently building a weather station from recycled components. Writes the "Student Lab Notes" column.
Soldering the last connections…
Content is written, tested in real classrooms and kitchens. We're finishing the platform. You'll be the first to know.
Save Me a Seat
at the Bench.
Join the waitlist and we'll send you the first dispatch the moment Tinker opens. Tell us who you are so we can personalize your welcome.
Submit Your
First Experiment Idea.
The best Tinker posts will come from readers. Tell us what you want to build, teach, or figure out. We'll write it up together.
34 ideas already submitted
