Now your going to make me blush.
When the kids were young if they had a question about how something worked or science their mom would tell them that that was a daddy question so they knew they had to come and ask me for the answer, and then they would most times add "The Readers Digest Version".
It is one thing to give the answer of say what you would do But I like to give the reason why I have come to that conclusion.
I like it when new ones post pictures with their questions as it provides so much more information. It allows us to spot things and concerns that they The newer beekeeper hasn't noticed or even realizes.
You want to be sensitive about subjects and suggesting a colonies strength is maybe not what it should be. or that the queen that good money was spent on may not be worth what they paid for her. but I believe it is better for the new beekeeper to know these facts so the problem can be fixed before the hive gets worse.
I had a 1 frame that I had pulled out of a colony last summer I thought I might have to do a trap out but their grand kids one with a bee venom allergy was coming the next week so the were did in. I posted what was happening in the hive as a leaning too. when the queen should have been mated and taking up laying, I seen drone brood in worker cells Capped, mutable eggs in cells, spotty brood, single eggs in cells in standing up in the cell bottom, and a queen that was still small, Hadn't fattened up. What was I looking at? Could be laying worker, Poor mated queen, Queen not mated, I could not say, only guess at that time. But I did gather enough information from the inspection that in a week the young brood would be capped. Show Worker or Drone. So I did what Iddee mostly suggests I gave them another week, To answer the question that were left unanswered the week before. but it provided a time line of when I had to go back in to see what the verdict was and the solution moving forward. Keep it as a colony, or shake the bees out and let them join other colonies.
Point being. The bees are in control and all we can do is assist them in their journey. May be we can translate some of what is happening in the hive and with the bees to the newer members of the beekeeping family.