If you’ve spent any time on the internet in the last decade, you know Mark Rober. He’s the former NASA engineer who traded the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for YouTube, where he built an empire out of glitter bombs, elaborate squirrel obstacle courses, and swimming pools filled with Jell-O. He has a knack for making physics and engineering look like the most fun you could possibly have on a Tuesday afternoon. But behind the explosive viral stunts that have netted him nearly 80 million subscribers, Rober has been quietly working on a massive, three-year secret project. Now, the secret is out, and it might just change how an entire generation learns science.
This week, YouTube officially announced a partnership with Rober to launch Class CrunchLabs, a comprehensive, hands-on science curriculum aimed at students in grades 3 through 8. Slated for the back-to-school 2026 season, this isn’t just a branded content push or a handful of sponsored videos. It is a fully fleshed-out, standards-aligned educational program developed alongside the National Science Teaching Association (NSTA). And the best part? It is completely, forever free for teachers.
To understand why a YouTube megastar is suddenly elbow-deep in middle school pedagogy, you have to look back at a TED Talk Rober gave earlier this year. In April 2026, he stood on stage in Vancouver and revealed that he and his company, CrunchLabs, had poured a staggering $60 million into developing this curriculum. His motivation is refreshingly straightforward: he believes teachers have the most important job on the planet, and he is heartbroken by the reality that they are severely underpaid and frequently forced to spend their own money on subpar classroom materials. Rober’s ultimate goal with Class CrunchLabs is to give educators a world-class resource that doesn’t cost them a dime, essentially handing them the tools to look like absolute heroes to their students.
The core philosophy driving the curriculum is something Rober refers to as “hiding the vegetables.” If you try to teach a 10-year-old the dry, six-step scientific method using a dusty textbook, you’re going to lose them. But if you teach those exact same concepts by dropping a car onto a giant trampoline or simulating a crash landing in outer space, you suddenly have their undivided attention. The Class CrunchLabs program is designed to deliver rigorous, Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) through the same high-energy, visceral storytelling that makes Rober’s YouTube channel so popular.
The scale of the rollout is ambitious. The curriculum includes hundreds of hands-on, minds-on challenges that utilize everyday classroom items, ensuring that the barrier to entry remains low. Accompanying these physical experiments are more than 1,000 new videos hosted on a dedicated YouTube channel, heavily localized and translated into 34 different languages to reach a global classroom. These videos aren’t just Rober talking to a camera, either. They feature guest appearances from real-world STEM heavyweights like NASA Astronaut Jonny Kim and popular science creators like ElectroBOOM, proving to kids that science is a collaborative, thrilling pursuit.
This educational pivot is the natural evolution of Rober’s broader mission. Over the last few years, his consumer-facing CrunchLabs subscription boxes—which send build-it-yourself engineering toys and coding robots directly to kids’ homes—have been wildly successful. He is even expanding into publishing through a massive multi-book deal with Scholastic set to hit book fairs this fall. But while the subscription boxes and books are fantastic tools for families who can afford them, Class CrunchLabs democratizes that same high-quality STEM education, placing it directly into public school systems where it can reach everyone.
For YouTube, this partnership is a massive win in its ongoing push to be taken seriously as a hub for high-quality academic content rather than just an entertainment platform. By backing Rober’s vision, they are putting their weight behind a creator who actually understands the mechanics of capturing attention and channeling it into genuine learning.
Ultimately, this is an experiment in whether the manic, high-production value of internet culture can be successfully reverse-engineered into a traditional classroom setting. If Rober and his team pull this off, they won’t just be saving teachers out-of-pocket expenses; they’ll be minting millions of future engineers who learned early on that failing, iterating, and blowing things up is exactly how you figure out how the world works.
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