School Outreach (Workshops and Teaching)

Boudica also does educational work in the 11-18 age group. We are pleased to offer school visits.

Schools often lack the skills in-house to teach cyber yet are increasingly under pressure to provide it on the curriculum.

We provide a one-day mixed workshop with talks, demonstrations, and exercises for young people about cyber awareness.

Contact us with no commitment as soon as you're interested because pre-planning is an important factor. We can offer free materials and guidance for studying topics, such as open research homework leading up to an on-site event, to create the best experience for students.

Note: We're currently limited to the South of England.

Contact: Call our schools and colleges line on +44 (0) 1202 022249 (open 9-5 Mon-Fri).

Hackathons at schools

Research and Psychology Led

Research shows that engaging with young people aged 11-13 profoundly affects career choices. We've developed teaching materials, workshops, hackathons, and talks to inspire and motivate young people.

Our message is simple: take control of technology and become leaders, not followers, in the digital world.

Building National Skills Capacity

We help children question the hyper-individualistic values of vanity and self-promotion perpetuated by Big Tech, showing how these undermine self-confidence for profit.

Equally urgent are concerns about children's online welfare, mental health, and the critical shortfall of computer science and information security skills, which impact economic standing and national security.

We address the skills gap, highlight the earning potential in technology careers, and emphasize how cybersecurity, law enforcement, or intelligence can provide fulfilling opportunities to serve communities.

History and Pride

A great starting point is reminding young people of Britain's contributions to computing. From Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace in the 1820s to Alan Turing, Tommy Flowers, and the Manchester MK-I by Williams and Kilburn, British innovators have shaped the tech landscape.

The world-dominant microprocessor, used in nearly every phone and tablet, was designed by Acorn in Cambridge.

Bletchley Park: The real home of computing

Topical, Relevant, Prescient

At Boudica, we stay ahead of trends and threats. Our work is consistently ahead of the curve, offering insights that textbooks and most online sources can't match.

Much of what we discuss plays out in the news daily.

Teaching 11 - 18 year students