Museum educator shares information to an audience about their four programs. |
"How would you get troops on a beach when
there's a big coral reef in the way?" "If you were Eisenhower or
Churchill and had the information they had what decisions would you make?"
These are the type of questions students are confronted with when they take a
digital field trip to the The National WWII Museum. The museum is known for problem-based,
distance learning which sparks minds as
it brings content to life and into the classroom from a state-of-the-art,
onsite studio.
The Museum is a dynamic educational resource.
USA Today gave the Museum its top rank as one of the “Best Places to Learn U.S.
Military History." Exhibitions and programs allow students from all
backgrounds to explore the values and beliefs—the universal concepts—that
Americans and their Allies embraced during World War II.
Schools can take advantage of four
distance learning programs as follows:
Webinars
Students have the opportunity
to interact with authors, historians, and Museum experts to explore a broad
array of topics that bring WWII history to life. No special technology needed,
thousands of students can connect to the Museum at once simply via their
classroom computer to view live, interactive programs that immerse students in
history.
Webinars are free.
Electronic
Field Trips
Electronic Field Trips are
streamed directly into your classroom—no special technology required.
Focusing on the national impact of World War II, take your students on a
cross-country tour of historic sites while examining fascinating artifacts
and exhibits at The National WWII Museum. Hosted by student reporters,
Electronic Field Trips will help your students understand how the war affected
young people just like them. Check out past
and future Electronic Field Trips.
Skype in the
Classroom
Classrooms across the world
can interact with Museum experts and educators for short, dynamic virtual
connections with Skype in the Classroom. This can serve as an introduction to
an array of WWII topics and locations through the Museum. These programs are
meant to be quick, not take your whole entire class period, and enhance the
curriculum you're already teaching in the classroom.
Skype in the Classroom is
free.
Virtual Field Trips
Interactive, fast-paced
Virtual Field Trips are videoconferenced LIVE into classrooms. A museum
educator guides students as they analyze maps, photographs, artifacts, posters,
speeches, and songs as they explore the chronologies, strategies, motivations,
and outcomes behind these fascinating chapters of WWII history.
Sessions last one class period and include pre-and post-program curriculum
materials.
Virtual Field Trips
are $100 per session.
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