Bring students face to face with the natural world through a managed habitat program. Hands on learning that connects to STEM, biology, and UN Sustainable Development Goals, delivered entirely by our team.
Explore the ProgramThree outcomes that matter to educators, parents, and students alike.
Students interact with real ecosystems on their own campus. They observe pollinator behavior, seasonal patterns, and habitat dynamics firsthand, building a relationship with the environment that a textbook alone cannot provide.
Shared outdoor activities spark curiosity, conversation, and cooperation among students. Working together around a living habitat teaches collaboration in ways that classroom projects often struggle to replicate.
The program creates concrete touchpoints for STEM, environmental science, and biology curricula. Students observe measurable data and draw real conclusions, reinforcing what they study in the classroom with observable results outside.
Three ways we integrate with your school's goals and calendar.
Our habitat specialists visit your school to lead age appropriate sessions. Students get hands on with guided observations, species identification, and structured data collection. Each visit is designed to tie directly into your existing curriculum, so teachers spend less time planning and more time teaching.
Students learn what biodiversity preservation means by witnessing it up close. They see how a single habitat supports pollinator species, contributes to local ecosystems, and connects to broader environmental goals. This direct exposure creates awareness that lasts well beyond graduation.
Schools that host a living biodiversity program stand out to prospective families and faculty. It signals a commitment to experiential education and environmental responsibility that parents increasingly look for. The program also generates compelling stories for newsletters, open house events, and admissions materials.
We manage each component so your staff can focus on teaching.
Purpose built structures installed on your campus grounds, selected for your region and local species.
Scheduled visits from habitat specialists featuring presentations, outdoor activities, and guided observation.
Digital resources teachers can use in class, including videos, lesson plans, and species reference guides.
School branded jars that can be used for educational demonstrations, community events, or fundraising.
On site panels with species information, pollinator facts, and QR codes linking to deeper digital content.
Structured biodiversity metrics your school can use in sustainability reports and accreditation documentation.
Straightforward answers to what schools ask most often.
Safety is a foundational part of how the program is designed. The habitats host solitary wild bee species that are non aggressive and rarely sting. In years of operating across dozens of school campuses, we have never had a safety incident. Every installation is placed with student traffic patterns in mind, and our specialists brief school staff before the program begins.
Yes. The program supports STEM, environmental science, and biology curricula at every level. Our educational resources include lesson plan suggestions and direct connections to UN Sustainable Development Goals. Teachers can adapt the materials to fit their specific grade level and subject requirements.
The program serves every stage of education, from elementary school through post secondary institutions. We tailor the complexity of events and materials to match the age group. Younger students benefit from sensory exploration and storytelling, while older students engage with data analysis, research methodology, and environmental policy discussions.
No. Our team handles every aspect of habitat maintenance, from seasonal cleaning to species monitoring. School staff and facilities teams do not need to add anything to their workload. We schedule all service visits in advance and coordinate with your administration so there is no disruption to the school day.
Schools use the honey in a variety of ways. Many incorporate it into science lessons about pollination and food production. Others share it with families at school events or sell branded jars as a fundraiser. The custom labelling makes it a memorable item that reinforces the school's environmental identity.
Learn how a Praderama habitat program can support your curriculum, engage your students, and position your school as a leader in environmental education.
Talk to Our Education Team