Frequently Asked Questions

How can we help you?

We’ve pulled together some of the commonly asked questions to give you more information about Digital Xtra’s Grant Awards and help determine if they’re right for your initiative. If you have a question that you can’t find the answer to, please use the contact us page.

What types of projects do you fund?

Digital Xtra supports extracurricular tech activities, which enables young people to learn innovative digital technologies skills outside the core school education curriculum; whilst providing a safe, fun, and sociable environment.

Activities delivered in a school environment – such as youth clubs, lunchtime clubs, after-school clubs, or touring programmes – are considered extracurricular provided they do not form part of core school curriculum daily activity.

Supported activities must teach applied computing skills such as computational thinking, coding, robotics, games design, data science, or cybersecurity. Young people should also be given opportunities to apply this knowledge in meaningful and creative ways allowing them to become more confident with digital technologies.

Some examples of what the grant can support include:

  • Financial costs incurred during the delivery of the activity e.g., staff wages, equipment and materials, room hire, catering, travel within Scotland (travel costs for young people is submissible as part of a grant application, however, all costs must meet the criteria of providing good value for money as judged by the Application Evaluation Panel)
  • Staff, teacher, or volunteer training (please note, any training undertaken must be essential for the proposed extracurricular activity)
  • Course/content development
  • Essential marketing and evaluation materials
  • Software or hardware specific to the delivery of the initiative. Applicants will need to provide insurance, maintenance, and secure storage for any items and ensure the software/hardware is maintained to support the sustainability of the initiative
  • Other costs specific to the delivery of the initiative and directly related to outcome may be considered provided their need is clearly explained in the application.

What types of projects do you not fund?

As highlighted above, proposed activities must teach applied computing skills and allow young people to understand and create with technology, not simply use it. As such, activities which teach other skills related to digital literacy or digital media are excluded from funding. Digital literacy or digital media skills can be defined as:

  • the general use of digital applications (e.g., Microsoft Office, Photoshop, iMovie, social media) excluding apps used for teaching coding/computing science
  • the ability to access general information online
  • the administration and monitoring of digital content
  • methods of communicating with technology including, but not limited to:
    • videography / photography
    • video / photo editing
    • vlogging / blogging
    • digital / online marketing
    • graphic design

 

Digital Xtra also will not fund the following:

  • Standard work to improve employability skills (e.g., Microsoft Office training, training on CV writing, interview skills)
  • Equipment used exclusively for general classroom use (e.g., tablets, laptops, or printers to assist pupils in classroom learning)
  • Activities solely focussed on hardware (please note, hardware costs can be included if the focus of the proposed activity is software such as coding, robotics, machine learning, cyber, games development, etc.)
  • Interventions based predominantly on raising awareness of careers (e.g., careers fairs)
  • Initiatives that promote political or religious beliefs
  • Initiatives which take place outwith Scotland
  • Initiatives whose primary audience is older than 16 years
  • Individuals or organisations that benefit only one person
  • Initiatives where the primary purpose is to conduct research
  • Business start-up or scale-up activity
  • Customs and/or international shipping costs
  • General appeals or circulars (the proposed activity must have defined targets and outcomes and be delivered during the specified grant delivery phase)

The grant also cannot cover funding retrospectively or as a substitute for programmed ‘core’ spend. This means ‘business as usual’ costs or costs for which alternative funding has already been allocated. However, increasing capacity of existing activity is acceptable and a percentage of costs associated with this increased capacity is admissible.

Who can apply for a grant?

To be eligible for a grant award, applicants must meet the following criteria:

  • The Main Applicant is a UK registered company, UK registered charity, chartered body, local authority, school, college, or university actively involved in the provision of computing education and/or digital technologies related activities for young people. Please note, the Main Applicant cannot be a Partner or Supporter of Digital Xtra.
  • The proposed initiative meets the Core Objective of Digital Xtra (as defined in the Round X Grant Guidelines)
  • The grant requested is between £500 and £5,000
  • The proposed initiative is an ‘extracurricular activity’
  • The primary audience are young people aged 16 years and under
  • The proposed initiative will commence after 1 July 2025 and be completed by 30 June 2026 (as outlined in the ‘Project Plan’ submitted as part of the grant application)
  • The proposed initiative will be delivered entirely in Scotland

What type of audiences should I engage?

The primary audience for all supported activities must be young people aged 16 years or under.

Digital Xtra also places a strong emphasis on promoting diversity and inclusion to help break down barriers at a grassroots level. In particular, key audiences include areas often excluded from digital tech activities through lack of local resources or geography (i.e., areas of high deprivation and/or rural isolation) and groups underrepresented in the digital technologies sector (i.e., girls and young women, minority groups, children and young people with additional support needs).

Please indicate in your application if your initiative proactively targets any of these key audiences. For definitions and more information about key audiences, please refer to the Round X (2025/26) Grant Guidelines.

When should my project start/end?

Proposed initiatives are to start and end during the following academic year (July to June). Projects supported duing the Round IX grants cycle should commence after 1 July 2025 and be completed before 30 June 2026.

What is the payment schedule?

Grants are paid in three instalments – 60% after the Grant Offer Acceptance Letter (G.O.A.L.) is submitted, 30% upon receipt of the midpoint evaluation (as agreed in the G.O.A.L), and 10% upon receipt of the final evaluation. Any unspent funding must be repaid to Digital Xtra at the conclusion of the grant delivery phase. All grant recipients will be required to co-operate with Digital Xtra in our management of the funding.

I’m sole trader/self-employed. Can I apply as an individual?

No, the charity will not fund applications from individuals. The Main Applicant must be a UK registered company, UK registered charity, chartered body, local authority, school, college, or university actively involved in the provision of computing education and/or digital technologies related activities for young people. Please note, the Main Applicant cannot be a Partner or Supporter of Digital Xtra.

I would like to apply for this funding as part of a larger project. Is this allowed?

Yes, you can apply for partial funding. If the grant amount requested does not fully fund the proposed initiative and/or you are receiving any additional funding or in-kind support towards the project, then you must provide details of additional funding sources (i.e., paid through internal budget, tickets sales, other grants/sponsorship, or equipment donations). Please also indicate if these sources are confirmed or not and if they will cover all outstanding project costs or is additional funding still required to deliver the proposed initiative.

Please note, all project costs must be secured prior to project commencement. Failure to secure all required funding by project commencement will result in the grant award being withheld until such time that all required funding is obtained. Failure to obtain all required funding may result in partial or complete cancellation of the grant award.

I have previously received funding from Digital Xtra. Can I apply again?

Yes, provided a newly completed application is submitted. This includes both funding for a new activity or for an activity previously supported by Digital Xtra which is notably being developed beyond the initial delivery and/or will significantly increase overall capacity beyond what has already been achieved. Previously supported initiatives which are projected to achieve the same Targets and Outcomes as previous years will not be considered.

Can I use AI to help write my application?

Digital Xtra will not reject any application where the use of AI is suspected but strongly urges caution in an overuse or overreliance on AI.

Digital Xtra wants to support initiatives which are evidenced to make a clear impact in your community, and no one knows your proposed initiative or audience as well as you. Therefore, no one can articulate why it should be funded or provide specific details about its impact like you can. It is the view of Digital Xtra that AI is a tool which can be used to generate ideas, provide a starting point, improve language, and streamline applications. However, there are questions in the application which provide an opportunity to bring your project to life and connect with the evaluator with the young people who will benefit; something which AI will struggle with. Digital Xtra encourages you to take full advantage of these opportunities.

The National Lottery Community Fund recently published guidance on the use of AI in grant applications which articulates several tips and risks when using AI.

How are applications evaluated?

Eligible applications will be evaluated by the Application Evaluation Panel which is made up of representatives from industry, education & skills organisations, and other relevant stakeholders. Decisions will be based only on the information provided within the application form. Please be as clear and concise as possible as you will not have the opportunity to provide any additional information once the application has been submitted.

Applications will be evaluated in accordance with a set scoring methodology and evaluation criteria. Please refer to the Grant Guidelines for more information on this methodology.

Once independent evaluations are completed and verified, the Panel will jointly agree on a final cumulative score for each application. Applications will then be ranked in order of total score achieved with top-ranked applicants invited to go through a due diligence process before funding is released.

I would like to find out more. Can I chat in-person with someone?

Yes, each year we run in-person information seminars for prospective applicants to come along and chat to our team. Our team can answer any questions and they will also bring along some fun coding kits to try out! We highly recommend attending one of our in-person seminars or online webinars if you are planning to apply for a grant award.

If you would like to attend one of the in-person seminars, please click on the link below to register your place:

Glasgow, Tues 25th Feb 16:00 to 18:00 (last entry at 17:30)

Aberdeen, Wed 26th Feb 15:30 to 18:00 (last entry at 17:30)

Dundee, Thurs 27th Feb 15:30 to 18:00 (last entry at 17:30)

Edinburgh, Mon 3rd Feb 15:30 to 18:00 (last entry at 17:30)

Stirling, Tues 4th Feb 15:30 to 18:00 (last entry at 17:30)

I can't attend an in-person seminar. Do you have anything online?

We understand that sometimes it isn’t possible to join us at one of our in-person sessions. As such, we have also scheduled two online information webinars via Microsoft Teams. Please note, applicants only need to attend one session (not both) as the same information will be discussed at both. The team will review the application process followed by an informal Q&A session.

We highly recommend attending one of our in-person sessions or online webinars if you are planning to apply for a grant award. If you would like to attend one of our online webinars, please click on the link below to register your place:

Online Information Webinar, Thurs 20th Feb 15:45 to 17:00

Online Information Webinar, Tues 11th Mar 18:45 to 20:00

When will I find out if my application has been successful or not?

Successful applicants will be contacted in early June inviting them to join the Digital Xtra team for a due diligence and onboarding session after the evaluation and ranking process has been completed. All applicants, regardless of the outcome of their application, will be contacted before the end of June.

Further information

Please read the Grant Guidelines and Application Form thoroughly prior to completion. Additional resources such as a sample Project Plan, sample Budget, various Case Studies, online webinars, and in-person seminars are also available on the Round X Documents page. Incomplete or ineligible forms will not be considered.

Please consult Digital Xtra’s website and social media channels for any updates throughout the grant application period.

Need more help?

If you have any questions or clarifications not covered above, please contact Digital Xtra via email at info@digitalxtra.scot and a member of our team will be in touch.

© 2025 Digital Xtra. All rights reserved.
Read our Privacy Policy here

Click Me