At The Drone Z.one, we proudly offer the Drone Legends curriculum because it does exactly what it promises—it makes STEM education hands-on, high-energy, and deeply engaging. Drone Legends takes the novelty of drones and turns it into a real-world learning engine, giving students the chance to tackle science, technology, engineering, and math concepts through practical problem-solving and teamwork. The modules are well-structured, age-appropriate, and packed with fun missions that push kids to think like engineers and pilots, not just drone operators.
By bringing Drone Legends into our programs, we’re not just teaching kids how to fly—we’re helping them build leadership, collaboration, and critical thinking skills that will stick long after they land. Whether it’s in our after-school clubs, summer camps, or classroom partnerships, Drone Legends turns curiosity into capability. It’s the perfect match for our mission at The Drone Z.one: to launch the next generation of confident, capable drone pilots and innovators.
From "The Drone Girl" blog - As drones have moved from fringe hobbyist gear to mainstream technology, they’ve taken off in schools, too. What once was an extracurricular curiosity is now a core part of STEM education in classrooms across the U.S. And into this space steps Drone Legends, a full-service platform promising to bring aerial robotics to students from kindergarten through 12th grade.
Drone Legends offers a range of kits and curricula designed to teach everything from basic science concepts to real-time first-person view (FPV) drone racing. It’s ambitious. It’s relatively polished. Yet — for many schools — it’s expensive. I spent hours digging through the curriculum materials, examining the hardware partnerships, comparing competitors and evaluating whether Drone Legends is worth the price tag.
My take: it’s one of the most comprehensive options available, especially for schools that want to go beyond one-off drone demos and build a long-term, standards-aligned program. But it’s not the cheapest, and it’s not for every classroom.