Frequent honest questions
What parents and students ask before applying.
How is this different from a regular Codeforces club or a Coding Ninjas Olympiad batch?
Three differences. First, batch size: we cap cohorts at eight, so every student is known by name and weak spot. Second, the syllabus is built around the Indian Computing Olympiad calendar specifically, not a generic competitive programming roadmap — IOQI mathematics, ZIO paper reasoning and INOI C++ are all distinct disciplines and need distinct preparation blocks. Third, the mentors are people who have themselves sat the relevant papers, not generalists.
My child has no coding background. Can they still join?
If your child is in Class 6 or 7 and has strong mathematics, we will accept them into the Rung I cohort and treat the first three months as a coding-from-scratch ramp. For students Class 8 and above, we look for at least one year of comfortable Python or C++ before the Medal Track makes sense — otherwise we recommend our teen coding programme first and a Medal Track entry the following year. We will tell you honestly which is right after the screening call.
What is the total time commitment per week?
Rungs I and II require about six hours per week: two 90-minute classes and roughly three hours of independent problem work. From Rung III onward, the load grows to nine hours per week, and during the IOQI eight-week sprint (Rung IV) it peaks at twelve. We design the load to be sustainable alongside school — most of our students are in CBSE, ICSE, IB or IGCSE and the track is timed to respect their board calendars.
What if my child does not place in IOQI in the first year?
Most do not. The student who places at IOQI in their first attempt is the exception, not the rule. Modern Age Coders treats Rung-I to Rung-V as a two-year arc by default — the goal is medal selection by the second IOQI attempt for most students who start at Class 8 or 9. Students who join in Class 11 or 12 are placed on a different, accelerated curve. We will tell you what is realistic during the screening call. We do not over-promise.
Do you also run the medal track outside India?
Yes. Our online cohorts include students based in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, the UAE, Singapore and Australia. For US-based students we additionally prepare for USACO and the Math Kangaroo USA. For UK students, the British Informatics Olympiad. For students in Singapore, the Singapore IOI selections. Country-specific support pages: USA, UK, Canada, UAE, Singapore, Australia.
Is there a fee waiver or scholarship?
Yes. Modern Age Coders offers full and partial fee waivers for students who clear our internal screening with distinction, and for families in financial hardship. We do not advertise scholarships loudly because we do not want them to become a marketing channel — they exist to keep the door open for students who deserve to be in the room. Ask in the screening call. We will be honest about what we can offer.
How does this fit with JEE preparation?
For Class 11 and 12 students aiming at JEE, we offer a stacked alternative — our JEE-aspirant coding track. It runs Python and competitive programming on top of board and JEE preparation without disturbing the JEE clock. Several of our students have cleared JEE Advanced while continuing to compete on the coding circuit. The Medal Track itself is heavier and is best for students who are not also targeting JEE Advanced.
What if my child is younger than 10?
For ages 6 to 10, our age-wise coding pages outline a more appropriate path. Children that young can sit Bebras and Math Kangaroo, but a full Medal Track is not the right shape for them yet. We are happy to add your child to a junior Bebras cohort and to begin the Medal Track around Class 6 or 7.