The Feilding High School robotics team won the Future Foundation Robot Construction Challenge at the largest ever World Championship held in Louisville, Kentucky.

Feilding High School's incubator light robot creation has been recognised at America's Vex High School Robotics World Championships.

Head of the school's robotics department, teacher Graham Conlon said the team won the recent Future Foundation Robot Construction Challenge and received their trophy centre-stage at the robotics world championships on the weekend.

The championships have been officially deemed by Guiness World Records as the largest robotics competition of all time in Louisville, Kentucky.

"There are 22,000 teams worldwide with a total of one million competitors so it was fantastic this morning to be called up on stage to receive our trophy," the team posted on Facebook after the presentation.

The task required the team to design, construct and demonstrate a robot for classroom use.

"Being a farming school, we built a robot which automatically lifted an incubator light in the horticulture classroom to match the growth of a plant," Conlon said.

It was the fifth world championship trophy the group has won in its four years of operation.

The world championships drew 1000 high school-aged teams hailing from 32 countries, including Syria, Ethiopia, Russia and Mexico.

Tough initial round-robin matches meant the Feilding team was unable to progress onto the knock-out rounds of the tournament, Conlon said.

"They found the competition very stiff...the team fought hard and learnt a lot from being with the elite of world high school robotics."

The team was captained by Max Corpe, 17.

"Max has two world titles to his credit as well as a world second place."

Other members were vice-captain Owen Fenner, 15, Nathan Charles, 15, and Hunter Hopkins, 13.