All About Bees Workshops

 

We have a fabulous new workshop

All About Bees!

We are thrilled to offer engaging hands on activities to enrich your science lessons and enthuse your pupils, all from the school classroom.

Our All About Bees workshops are:

  • Themed around the curriculum

  • Interactive activities such as discussions and role play.

  • The children make something to take home or use in school as an eco project

  • Get to see bees close up without the worry live bees

  • See inside a real working hive (no bees)

  • Learn about pollination and habitats of pollinators

  • Explore hexagons and their appearance in the natural world

  • Taste local honey

The children get to explore a working hive without bees inside and see fresh honey comb. We use magnifying glasses to examine bees and learn about bee anatomy in a child friendly way. Our All About Bee Workshop looks at how bees communicate, the life cycle of a bee and the differences between, honey bees, bumble bees, solitary bees and wasps

Workshop costs are from £200. You  then can build in several options:

  • Build a bee hotel

  • Make a candle

  • Make a wild flower seed bomb

  • Grow seasonal wild flowers to create your own bee safari


We know you’re super-busy, so you can leave the planning and designing to us & we’ll create a day or workshop that will be super fun and educational for your pupils.

We are already in several schools in your area who would be very happy to vouch for our classes.

The bee workshop was an extremely engaging and well planned event. Jayne explained everything is such a clear way to the children. They really enjoyed doing a waggle dance, making seed bombs and looking at a real bee hive up close. This workshop tied in really well with our current Year 1 topic on Animals Including Humans, allowing the children to explore in greater depth the life of a bee. They really enjoyed examining a variety of bees under magnifying glasses , identifying the different body parts that were present. They even got to taste some of the honey that Jayne’s bees had made! “
— Mrs Goodman Ashtead Primary School