"Bridging the Lab and the Classroom: A Participatory Micro-Research Methodology for Scientist-Child Co-authorship in STEM" (Blue Blocks Micro Research Institute, 2026) presents a structured framework for involving school-age children as legitimate co-authors in scientific research. Rather than treating students as passive subjects, the methodology embeds researchers within everyday school activities — workshops, experiments, and problem-solving sessions — to observe and document children's original ideas, questions, and design contributions. The paper introduces the concept of "micro-studies": short, tightly scoped research cycles (2–6 weeks) with clearly defined observation units, documentation protocols, and role classifications for child participants. A key feature is the Co-Authorship Attribution Framework, which sets explicit contribution thresholds for child authors to qualify for authorship, while reserving data interpretation and analytical responsibilities for adult scientists. The framework also includes robust ethical framework for minor participants, and covering consent, data anonymization, and measures to prevent researcher bias. Developed and piloted at Blue Blocks Micro Research Institute in Hyderabad, India, the methodology is designed to be replicable across educational contexts, offering a rigorous path for schools to move beyond isolated student innovation projects and into peer-reviewed scientific publication. Related Publication: Micro Research Methodology Paper (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18584816)
Institute et al. (Tue,) studied this question.