• Medientyp: E-Book; Video
  • Titel: Learning outside the classroom : primary history
  • Körperschaft: Brook Lapping Productions
  • Erschienen: [London]: Teachers TV/UK Department of Education, 2010
  • Erschienen in: Great lesson ideas ; 1-4
    Education in Video: Volumes I + II
  • Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (61 min)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • Schlagwörter: History Study and teaching (Secondary) Great Britain ; Science Study and teaching (Secondary) Great Britain ; Art Study and teaching (Secondary) Great Britain ; Outdoor education Activity programs ; History Study and teaching (Primary) Great Britain ; School field trips Great Britain ; Instructional television programs ; Film
  • Reproduktionsnotiz: Previously released as DVD
  • Entstehung:
  • Anmerkungen: Title from resource description page (viewed Mar. 5, 2012)
    This edition in English
  • Beschreibung: Spark your pupils imaginations by taking them to environmental locations. Mary Muggridge, an experienced teacher and local authority adviser, presents three trip ideas for teaching using the environment. The Eden project offers the chance to visit the tropics and the desert in one disused quarry. The Blue John Cavern is a scary underground trip for six year olds. Mary Muggridge explains the importance of the pre-trip site visit. Spitalfields City Farm is just around the corner from a London school, but may as well be a world away as these pupils have never come nose to nose with a cow before. Mary Muggridge explains how trips don't have to involve too much travel, and that your local area can be a rich source of interesting trips. And finally a whole class trip to study the maths of trees at The National Arboretum at Westonbirt. The teachers use the gorgeous backdrop of the trees to plan a numeracy trail teaching functional skills by stealth

    Spark your pupils imaginations by taking them out of the classroom to see real tangible things. Mary Muggridge, an experienced teacher and local authority adviser presents three trip ideas for teaching outside the classroom. Goonhilly Earth Station made its last transmission in 2008, but at one time was the largest satellite station on Earth. Mary Muggridge explains how looking to local industry can inspire some amazing trips. The National Space Centre at Leicester is really worth the trip if you want to inspire your class about space and give them an immersive experience.The Field Studies Centre at Dale Fort is a residential base for science study, and in this film we see a class as they are taken away from home. For some, it's for the first time. Mary Muggridge shares her experiences of leading residential trips

    Spark your pupils imaginations by taking them out of the classroom to see real tangible things. Mary Muggridge, an experienced teacher and local authority adviser, presents three trip ideas for teaching outside the classroom. The Historic Quay at Hartlepool and HMS Trincomalee offer the chance for these secondary school students to experience cannon fire, and to really imagine life on board ship. The Roman Legionary Museum gives these secondary children the chance to experience what life would have been like for Romans in Britain 2000 years ago, Mary Muggridge admires this teacher's organisational skills as she plans a trip for over a hundred students. The Bolton Museum's Aquarium offers children the chance to work with expert artists, and draw from real life. This trip shows how you as the customer can tailor a trip to suit your class's needs

    Why not visit the Imperial War Museum, Duxford, The National Archives or Blists Hill Victorian Town and be inspired by living history, role play and real artefacts. The key principle for teaching history is to help your class raise questions, and there is no better way to spark their imaginations than taking them to historical locations. Imperial War Museum, Duxford gives a class an opportunity to study the KS2 topic structures using the historical context of war and conflict. Inspired by a Norman Foster designed aircraft hanger, and some fantastic historic planes they look at structures, and even build their own. At the National Archives in Kew the children are truly privileged to see some of the oldest and most important historic records that have shaped our country. And finally a whole class trip to Blist Hill Victorian Town at the Ironbridge Gorge museum allows the pupils to live like Victorians in an immersive historical experience