Illustration of a hand-held microphone with a Chocolate films logo on the mic cube

Documentary Workshops

With the support of industry experts, our workshops offer participants a practical experience of being a documentary filmmaker. They will experience the whole cycle of the production process including research, interview technique, filming and editing, enabling the group to produce a polished documentary film.

Documentaries come in many different forms and potential projects include oral histories about your local community, creative documentaries about your school or organisation to act as a promotional film, investigative journalism about a recent or historical event, or a documentary portrait.

What packages do we offer?

Illustration of a yellow alarm clock with the words "HALF DAY" in bold black font across it, accompanied by sparkles and a sign labeled "WORKSHOPS."

Short workshops

Illustration of calendar with Chocolate Films Workshops logo and the text "Full Day"

Full Day Workshops

Sun, cloud, Chocolate Films Workshops logo and the word 'holiday'

Holiday Workshops

Students film three children on micro-scooters

What equipment will the students use?

At Chocolate Films, we have a range of different kits that are ideal for our documentary workshops. Depending on the age and experience of the group, we will recommend anything from mobile phones, Gopro action cameras, to DSLR cameras or full production kits.

Our objective is to ensure that the students are receiving the learning experience that they are looking for. For a short workshop, we may try to focus on easy-to-use kit to ensure that we can focus on the journalistic side of documentary, whereas for a longer project it’s great to look deeper into the technical side of documentary production.

Two students work with a Canon video camera in an outdoor location.

How can documentary production link with the National Curriculum?

Documentary workshops are perfect for combining with English and Media Studies skills. However they can also be applied to many other subjects. We’ve run documentary projects on local history, PHSE topics, science investigations and more. As a discovery-based factual medium, it is extremely flexible by nature, and can help students explore facts and ideas across the curriculum.

a crew of young people prepare to shoot, with boom microphone, clapperboard and camera lined up

What key skills can you learn in our documentary workshops?

Documentary is a great tool for encouraging children and young people to research, debate and evaluate information. It teaches storytelling and journalism skills. The participants can learn interview techniques, including how to prep and carry out an interview.

The process of making the film teaches a range of valuable technical and digital skills including camerawork, audio recording, and editing.

And importantly the whole process teaches a range of soft skills, including communication and team work.

Check out our workshops for children and young people

Documentary Resources

Chocolate Films Workshops
in numbers

Abstract design featuring a stylized satellite dish and the number 2001.

2001

The year we were founded

Hand-drawn admit one ticket illustration with stars on a yellow background.

3000

The number of people we work with in an average year

A green triangular icon with the letter 'U' inside, surrounded by a black background.

4-102

The age range of students in our workshops!