The virtual field trips on this site include:
The Parliament Buildings in Ottawa, Ontario
Iqaluit, Nunavut – The Canadian Arctic
Farm Tours
Canadian Museum of History
The Royal Tyrrell Museum
5 GAP Recommended Field Trips
This collection features a selection of teacher recommended field trips for Grade 5. Our top field trip pick for the East is Wanuskewin. This is a great opportunity for students to explore Northern Plains Indigenous histories and cultures. Our top field trip pick for the West is Ancient Echos Interpretive Centre. There are a variety of short and long tours to choose from, including tours through coal mine ravines, ceremonial circles, and sacred sites. Enjoy exploring!
ANCIENT ECHOES INTERPRETIVE CENTRE is nestled at the junction of the Coalmine Ravine and the Eagle Creek and offers both indoor and outdoor tours of our Palaeontology sites (dinosaur and fossil displays and dig), Prairie Grasslands Ecology (virgin prairie medicine and food plants, animals in the wild and taxidermy displays), and First Nations History (petroglyphs, rock formations, effigies, archaeological dig, teepee rings, buffalo jump, food processing site, tool artifacts and pottery making displays). A permanent art exhibition by Metis artist, Jo Cooper, expresses a visual and oral story with “The Disappearance and Resurgence of the Buffalo”. Additionally, sculptures outside the centre stimulate the imagination as well as humour.
Ancient Echoes is currently operating under their summer hours, which run from May 7th to August 31st. This means we are open Tuesdays-Sundays from 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM (closed Mondays). Bookings can be made by calling the Centre at 1-306-377-2045 or emailing anciente@sasktel.net. Our Valley View Tea Room is open every Friday from 2:30-4:30 PM in May-August.
Ancient Echoes is a popular site for School Tours throughout the year offering custom-designed programs for students of all ages in the areas of Aboriginal History, Paleontology, Ecology, and Archaeology.
Ancient Echoes also offers regular summer programs including traditional pottery making, drum making, ecology and palaeontology hikes, full moon walks, educational and craft days for children, as well as numerous other “ project” days. A video of the ravine walk is available indoors for “rainy days”, or for those who do not wish to hike.
Ancient Echoes has just recently added a beautiful art gallery space to their walls. Our new Prairie Echoes Gallery offers numerous exhibits throughout the year of new and established artists and photographers.
- Subject:
- Biology
- Earth Science
- Emotional Wellness
- Environmental Science
- Health & Fitness
- Indigenous Perspectives
- Mental Wellness
- Native Studies
- Outdoor Education
- Physical Wellness
- Practical & Applied Arts
- Science
- Spiritual Wellness
- Wellness
- Wildlife Management
- Material Type:
- GAP 4
- GAP 5
- GAP 6
- Primary Source
- Date Added:
- 01/09/2022
Sign up for a 45 minute virtual field trip, and follow it up with a classroom unit about human rights and being an upstander. The classroom unit includes an inquiry project.
Virtual Field Trip:
Students will learn how to be human rights upstanders by discovering the stories of people who used their personal strengths to take a stand to protect their rights and the rights of others, creating change.
Students will:
1. Learn to identify traits all upstanders possess and understand that each of us also possess these traits in our own unique way.
2. Experience exhibits and the inspiring Museum architecture as if they were at the Museum in person.
Interact with a Museum guide and ask questions to better understand how they can take action for positive change.
3. Engage in discussion, critical thinking and reflection on their role in the protection of their own rights and the rights of others.
Classroom Unit:
The Be an Upstander resource is a project-based learning unit designed to complement the “Be an
Upstander” school program. This resource targets students in middle years and encourages inquiry and
action on human rights issues. Students will examine the traits of human rights upstanders and follow
their example. By the end of the project, students will have had the opportunity to explore an issue they
are personally passionate about, share their knowledge and lead others toward action.
The Be an Upstander website is a digital student experience designed to support student learning as part
of a larger human rights themed, project-based learning unit. Students developing upstander projects
will engage in personal inquiry and action on human rights issues that matter to them. Students will learn
about the traits of human rights upstanders, be introduced to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and examine their personal strengths. Following the example of the upstanders they learn about,
students will be challenged to take tangible steps to becoming human rights upstanders themselves.
If you need this resource in a different format for accessibility purposes, please contact
info@humanrights.ca.
Be an Upstander website: https://humanrights.ca/upstander/#/
Complementary teacher's guide https://humanrights.ca/upstander/#/teacher-guide
- Subject:
- 21st Century Competencies
- Education
- Elementary Education
- Emotional Wellness
- English Language Arts
- Social Studies
- Spiritual Wellness
- Wellness
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- GAP 5
- GAP 6
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Canadian Museum for Human Rights
- Date Added:
- 05/02/2023
The Science Centre is a great place to take your class on a field trip! The Science Centre includes hands on activities, workshops, and resources for teachers to explore.
Contact number: 306-791-7943
bookings@sasksciencecentre.com
- Subject:
- Agriculture Studies
- Agriculture, Food Sustainability & Security
- Astronomy
- Science
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Date Added:
- 05/12/2023
This is a 45 minute virtual field trip.
Learn about Canada’s ongoing human rights journey by engaging with Indigenous concepts of human rights and discovering how people have used and continue to use their voices and effective action to claim their rights. Our guides will take your students on an age‐appropriate and inspiring journey while helping them to see how these stories continue to be relevant and ongoing in Canada today. We’ll help your students walk away with a greater understanding of human rights and how the impacts of colonialism and racism continue to affect life in Canada.
Students will:
• Learn that human rights protections in Canada were fought for and won through the effective actions and voices of many groups and individuals.
• Experience exhibits and the inspiring Museum architecture as if they were at the Museum in person.
• Interact with a Museum guide and their classmates to deepen their understanding of equality and human rights.
• Engage in discussion, critical thinking and reflection on how colonialism and racism have ongoing impacts on the rights of people living in Canada today.
- Subject:
- Education
- Elementary Education
- Emotional Wellness
- Indigenous Perspectives
- Mental Wellness
- Social Studies
- Spiritual Wellness
- Wellness
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- GAP 5
- GAP 6
- Author:
- Canadian Museum for Human Rights
- Date Added:
- 05/02/2023
We currently offer 3 school programs:
1. Little Legislators Scavenger Hunt: 40-60 minutes, Pre-K to Grade 3 - Students will participate in a scavenger hunt for Saskatchewan symbols, and important people and objects in the Legislative Building. They learn about what government does in the building, monarchy connections, treaty maps and Indigenous leaders in Saskatchewan, and more.
2. Let's Get Legislative: 2 hours, Grades 4 to 12 - Students will gain an in-depth understanding of the function of the Legislative Building and of the elected members of the Assembly, and have the opportunity to ask their school’s MLA questions about what they see and learn in the Chamber. The Let's Get Legislative tour is only available when the Assembly is in session. For this program, please refer to the parliamentary calendar to select a date when the Assembly will be sitting.
3. Standard School Tour: 30 minutes, all grades - Our 30-minute tour, tailored to your students’ grade level. Learn the history of the building, government, the Westminster parliamentary tradition, and more.
- Subject:
- English Language Arts
- Social Studies
- Material Type:
- GAP 4
- GAP 5
- GAP 6
- Teaching/Learning Strategy
- Author:
- Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan
- Date Added:
- 06/08/2023
All Nations Hope Network, Saskatchewan has created a resource for the sacred story of the Mistasiniy including background information into story telling from generation to generation. The atayohkewina (sacred story) is presented with both English and Cree.
The sacred telling of Buffalo Child, is a living narrative of how Buffalo Child stone (Mistasiniy) came into being. We follow the life story of a little boy called Buffalo Child, as he transitions into manhood within the embrace of his buffalo family. In this âtayôhkewina - sacred story, we trace Buffalo Child’s transformation as a human and into a four legged being, finally his manifestation into stone. The sacred telling ends in the demise of Mistasiniy.
- Subject:
- Aboriginal Languages
- Education
- Elementary Education
- Indigenous Perspectives
- Spiritual Wellness
- Wellness
- Material Type:
- GAP 4
- GAP 5
- GAP 6
- Primary Source
- Reading
- Author:
- All Nations Hope Network
- Date Added:
- 06/19/2023
Introducing your students to art is a great way to inspire, evoke curiosity, and encourage deeper conversations about the world around us. Remai Modern offers resources and activities specially designed for educators and students to help kickstart a lifelong appreciation and love of art. Remai Modern has two educational experiences for teachers to explore:
Select a Highlights Tour, featuring not-to-be-missed objects currently on view; or a Picasso Tour, with a focus on our collection of Picasso linocuts and ceramic works in historic and modern context.
Connecting exhibitions to curriculum needs of teachers and students, Remai Modern School Tours demonstrate that art crosses disciplines and is relevant to daily life.
In these tours, students can: Compare and contrast original works of art and build critical viewing skills,
Understand the ideas of a wide variety of professional historical and contemporary art/artists, Practice inquiry-based and hands-on learning, and Develop a lifelong appreciation for art.
Secondly, Book a Remai Modern Online Workshop!
Remai Modern’s online art workshops build on the success of the museum’s in-person programs for students. Workshops promote informal learning through viewing, discussing, and making art and create chances for students to better understand themselves, their peers, and their community.
You may request an online workshop booking here: https://www.experienceremaimodern.ca/educators
Questions? email: workshops@remaimodern.org
- Subject:
- Arts Education
- Visual Arts
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- GAP 4
- GAP 5
- GAP 6
- Teaching/Learning Strategy
- Author:
- Kira Toews
- Date Added:
- 05/15/2023
This mobile training program provides specialized critical care skill training to STARS crews and other emergency care providers. The first mobile program of its kind in North America, it features a human patient simulator which replicates complex medical and traumatic problems over and over again. It offers medical personnel the opportunity to test and practice their reactions and skills, leading to a high degree of familiarity and confidence.
The mannequin: speaks and breathes, blinks and has reactive pupils, has a heartbeat and a pulse
accurately mirrors human responses to such procedures as CPR, intravenous medication, intubation, ventilation and catheterization.
The mannequins have been installed in four motorhomes, creating large mobile emergency rooms. Additionally, STARS has a wireless mannequin that can be transported in a specially-modified SUV. This mannequin can be used in a variety of environments including hospital emergency rooms, classrooms, and mock accidents scenes.
- Subject:
- 21st Century Competencies
- Career & Work Exploration
- Education
- Educational Technology
- Practical & Applied Arts
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- GAP 4
- GAP 5
- GAP 6
- Date Added:
- 05/15/2023
Enthusiastic and knowledgeable interpreters offer a unique opportunity for active, experiential, land-based learning. Most programs can usually be adapted for any grade level, however, suggested grades are included. School programs include hands-on learning that complements the Saskatchewan curriculum and makes a lasting impression on children of all ages.
Bookings are accepted starting on Tuesday, January 3, until Tuesday, May 23, on a first-come, first-served basis. Program times vary by park. This information can be found in your booking form. Canoe and kayak programs are available at select parks and are typically available starting June 1, subject to park conditions.
School groups are not required to pay a program fee.
- Subject:
- English Language Arts
- Health & Fitness
- Outdoor Education
- Physical Education
- Science
- Material Type:
- GAP 4
- GAP 5
- GAP 6
- Teaching/Learning Strategy
- Author:
- Tourism Saskatchewan Canada
- Saskatchewan Parks
- Date Added:
- 06/08/2023
The mission of the Ignite Athletics coaches and staff is to provide a safe and inclusive space for children of all skill levels and sport backgrounds. The goal of the camps is to help children improve movement literacy and develop the basic skills of sports performance.
The space includes a wall climbing area with many obstacles and gross motor activities. Programmers are phenomenal at creating age appropriate obstacle courses that are inclusive to all abilities of children.
- Subject:
- Health & Fitness
- Physical Education
- Material Type:
- GAP 4
- GAP 5
- GAP 6
- Author:
- Kira Toews
- Date Added:
- 05/05/2023
This is a great field trip for your grade 5 class. Tours include, Chicago Connection, Passage to Fortune, and Bunker 24. This field trip aligns well to the topic of immigration.
- Subject:
- Social Studies
- Material Type:
- GAP 5
- Date Added:
- 05/05/2023
The Museum of Natural Sciences at the U of S in Saskatoon showcases the history of Earth and the evolution of life on it through exhibits and displays that include dinosaur skeleton replicas, fossils, live animals and plants, rocks, and minerals.
Free field trips are offered over seven weeks in partnership with the USask science departments, museums and galleries, Science Outreach, and community groups. Join us for hands-on activities and tours at the Museum of Natural Sciences, in teaching laboratories, and at other campus cultural facilities.