What is FIRST LEGO League? A Complete Guide for Parents
FIRST LEGO League (FLL) is more than a robotics competition—it's one of the world's largest youth STEM programs, combining hands-on engineering with real-world problem-solving. If you're considering robotics education for your child, understanding what FLL offers can help you make an informed decision.
What is FIRST LEGO League?
FIRST LEGO League is a guided STEM program created through a partnership between FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) and the LEGO Group. Founded in 1998, the program introduces children ages 4-16 to science, technology, engineering, and math through hands-on learning experiences.
Unlike traditional robotics classes that focus solely on building and programming, FLL is built around annual themed challenges that require students to research real-world problems, design solutions, and demonstrate core values like teamwork and innovation.
🎯 The FLL Mission
"FIRST LEGO League guides youth through STEM learning and exploration at an early age... Students emerge more confident, excited, and equipped with the skills they need in a changing workforce."
The Three FLL Divisions
FLL offers three age-appropriate divisions, each designed to build upon the previous level's foundation:
Discover
Introduction to STEM through play using LEGO DUPLO bricks. Children explore concepts and build habits of learning.
Explore
Fundamentals of engineering with LEGO Education SPIKE Essential. Students design, code, and discover real-world solutions.
Challenge
Full competition experience with LEGO SPIKE Prime. Includes robot game, research project, and judged presentations.
The Three Components of FLL Challenge
At the Challenge level (ages 9-16), teams are evaluated on three distinct components, making it far more comprehensive than typical robotics programs:
Robot Game
Teams design, build, and program an autonomous robot using LEGO Education SPIKE Prime to complete missions on a themed game table. Robots must operate independently—no remote control allowed. Students learn programming, mechanical engineering, and strategic thinking.
Innovation Project
Teams identify a real-world problem related to the season's theme, research it thoroughly, develop an innovative solution, and share their findings with others. This component develops research skills, critical thinking, and scientific methodology.
Core Values
Teams demonstrate teamwork, discovery, innovation, inclusion, impact, and fun throughout the program. Judges evaluate how well teams embody these values during presentations and interactions.
The FIRST Core Values
What distinguishes FLL from other competitions is its emphasis on values-based learning. All FLL programs are guided by six core values:
What Does the Research Say?
The impact of FIRST LEGO League has been studied extensively. A 2022 semi-systematic review published in the Journal for STEM Education Research examined research from 2004-2022 and identified three major impact areas:
The review found 26 publications meeting inclusion criteria and identified three significant research themes: "(1) impacts on students' motivation, STEM learning, and attitudes, (2) development of twenty-first century skills, and (3) coaching/pedagogical strategies to support student learning and skill development."
— Journal for STEM Education Research, October 2022
Key Research Findings
According to research compiled by FIRST and partner organizations:
- Skill Development: Participants acquire programming, building, researching, presenting, and teamwork skills applicable in school and careers
- STEM Interest: Participation increases interest in STEM subjects and careers, particularly among underrepresented groups
- 21st Century Skills: Students develop collaboration, communication, critical thinking, and problem-solving abilities
- Confidence: The program builds self-efficacy and confidence in technical abilities
A multi-year longitudinal study conducted by Brandeis University Center for Youth and Communities provides evidence that "participation does just that"—creating lasting positive impact on participants across all demographic groups.
— LEGO Education, citing Brandeis University research
What Skills Do Children Actually Learn?
Beyond the technical skills, FLL develops capabilities that transfer to academic and life success:
Technical Skills
- Programming (block-based progressing to text-based)
- Mechanical engineering and robot design
- Research methodology
- Data collection and analysis
- Technical documentation
Soft Skills
- Public speaking and presentation
- Team collaboration and conflict resolution
- Time management and project planning
- Resilience and learning from failure
- Creative problem-solving
The Competition Structure
FLL teams progress through a structured competition season:
- Season Launch (August-September): New challenge revealed with theme, robot missions, and innovation project topic
- Team Preparation (September-December): Teams build robots, develop innovation projects, and practice presentations
- Regional Tournaments (November-January): Teams compete locally for advancement
- State/Regional Championships (January-March): Top teams advance to larger competitions
- World Festival (April): Elite teams from around the world compete at the FIRST Championship
Is FLL Right for Your Child?
FLL can benefit children who:
- Show interest in building, creating, or technology
- Enjoy working collaboratively with others
- Are curious about how things work
- Could benefit from developing presentation skills
- Thrive with hands-on, project-based learning
Importantly, prior robotics or coding experience is not required. FLL is designed to meet students where they are and build skills progressively.
📌 The Bottom Line
FIRST LEGO League offers a comprehensive STEM experience that goes far beyond robotics. The combination of engineering challenges, research projects, and values-based learning develops technical skills alongside the collaboration, communication, and critical thinking abilities that students need for future success.
