All articles

NEbots Teacher Training: Turning Educators into Maker-Mentors

By Team NEbots · 30 June 2026 · 6 min read

NEbots Teacher Training: Turning Educators into Maker-Mentors

One trained teacher reaches hundreds of students every year. That is the multiplier at the heart of NEbots teacher training. Rather than teaching students directly at scale, we equip educators to run practical STEM lessons with confidence, from setting up a tinkering lab to weaving robotics and coding into the curriculum they already teach.

Who teacher training is for

The program is built for school educators of any subject who want to bring hands-on learning to their classrooms. Workshops run from one to five days, at your school or the NEbots studio, and all training hardware is provided. It is aligned with NEP 2020's push for experiential, skill-based learning.

What educators gain

  • Confidence with robotics kits, drones, printers and coding tools
  • Ready-to-teach lesson plans mapped to your existing curriculum
  • A STEM lab plan sized to your school's space and budget
  • Certification for every participating educator

How the training works

  • Learn by building, yourselves: teachers build the projects students will, because doing beats watching
  • Classroom playbook: how to run a hands-on session, from pacing and safety to teamwork and assessment
  • Curriculum mapping: connect projects to the science, maths and computer chapters you already teach
  • Lab and kit setup: plan a STEM lab that fits your school, from one trolley of kits to a full room
  • Certification and support: educators are certified, and NEbots stays on call as lessons roll out

Why train teachers, not just students

Training teachers is the most sustainable way to bring STEM to a region. A single certified educator can inspire class after class, year after year, long after a one-off workshop would have ended. It keeps working after we leave the room.

If you lead a school, book a free demo day and see how NEbots teacher training can transform learning across your classrooms.

Share this article