Now Enrolling (Sep-Dec 2026 Session) – Limited Seats Available!
The Brain Bee Preparation at BRAIN is a structured training pathway designed to help middle and high school students prepare for the international neuroscience competition, Brain Bee. This program builds a strong foundation in brain science while developing the skills needed to excel in regional, national, and international Brain Bee competitions.
Who This Program Is For
This program is ideal for:
Students (ages ~12–18) interested in neuroscience and psychology
Students preparing for local, regional, or international Brain Bee competitions
Curious learners who want to understand how the brain works
High-achieving students seeking STEM enrichment and competition exposure
What Students Will Learn
The curriculum is based on core neuroscience domains tested in Brain Bee:
Brain anatomy and major brain regions
Neurons, synapses, and brain signaling
Neurodevelopment and neuroplasticity
Neurological and psychiatric disorders
Drugs, addiction, and brain chemistry
Sensory systems (vision, hearing, touch, etc.)
Memory, learning, and cognition
Clinical neuroscience and brain imaging basics
Program Highlights
Structured topic-wise Brain Bee curriculum
Simplified explanations of complex neuroscience concepts
Interactive quizzes and 1000s of questions for practice
Mock Brain Bee rounds (identification, Q&A, case-based questions)
Personalized mentoring and progress tracking
Strategy training for competition performance
Teaching Approach
Our training is designed to go beyond memorization. Students will:
Understand core brain concepts visually and conceptually
Learn through real clinical and research examples
Practice competition-style questioning and rapid recall
Build confidence for high-pressure quiz formats
Outcomes
Students completing the program will:
Gain strong foundational neuroscience knowledge
Be fully prepared for Brain Bee-style competitions
Develop scientific thinking and problem-solving skills
Build early exposure to careers in medicine, neuroscience, and research