Outreach Programs (Moveable Museum)
Movable Museum
Can't make it to the museum? Let us bring our “Moveable Museum” programs to you. These in-classroom learning experiences are excellent on their own or as a pre- or post-visit experience to enhance the lessons of your field trip.
Museum educators bring touchable, usable objects to your classroom in connection with standards-relevant themed programs specially designed to fit with your curriculum. Programs are designed for small class-sized groups and last 45-60 minutes.
These programs adapt easily from the classroom for use by scout groups, community organizations, adult living facilities, and libraries. For more information about the Movable Museum program or to make a booking for your organization, please contact Jennifer Haines at (585) 294-8216.
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The Animal Kingdom (Preschool-Grade 3)
A museum naturalist visits your classroom and brings a group of small animal friends for your students to meet. This program focuses on animal diversity and biological adaptations.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
MST1, 4, 6 |
| Dates Offered: |
November through February |
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The Ox-Cart Man (Preschool-Grade 3)
The story of a 19th-century family comes alive as our museum educator brings a cart full of objects for students to see and touch. Based on The Ox-Cart Man by Donald Hall. |
| NYS Standards Met: |
CDOS1; ELA1, 2, 3, 4; SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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Quilt Story (Preschool-Grade 3)
Our museum educator uses quilts to bring to life the touching story of a 19th-century girl and her quilt. Based on The Quilt Story written by Tony Johnston and illustrated by Tomie dePaola.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
A4; ELA1, 2, 3, 4; SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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Small Folks (Preschool-Grade 3)
Your students can learn what a typical day was like for children more than a century ago through hands-on activities using 19th-century objects and clothing.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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19th-Century Games (Grades 2-12 and adult groups)
Who doesn’t love playing with the simple toys of yesterday? Students are encouraged to try jackstraws, cup-and-ball, the whimmy-diddle, buzz saw and much more. Those who like a challenge can try to identify the strategies involved in each game and the physics principles that underlie each toy. The program also provides topics for discussing and/or writing about resource use, the purpose of play, and the comparison of how a young person’s time was – and is – split among work, school and play. |
| NYS Standards Met: |
HPEFCS1, 2; MST1, 3, 4, 5, 6; SS1 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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19th-Century Music (Grades 2-12 and adult groups)
All music in the 19th century was live and unplugged. With the guidance of a museum educator, your students will learn about musical instruments available in the 19th century, including the American reed organ, autoharp and pennywhistle, and they will discover the social and historical contexts of familiar patriotic songs and folk songs from America and abroad.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
A1, 2, 4; ELA1, 4; LOTE2; SS1 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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19th-Century Dance (Grades 3-12 and adult groups)
In the 19th century, dancing was a great form of physical exercise as well as a good opportunity for social interaction. Your students will learn some dance steps and then try them out to 19th-century music.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
A1, 2, 4; HPEFCS1, 2; LOTE2; SS1 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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19th-Century Fashion (Grades 7-12 and adult groups)
Costuming is an integral interpretive tool at Genesee Country Village & Museum. In this program, we bring you a sampling of 19th-century clothing styles along with explanations of the origins and functions of costume elements. The program can be customized to suit your specific needs and time frame and may be requested in either a lecture format or as a fashion show. Pricing reflects the number of models and program length.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
A2, 3, 4; CDOS1; HPEFCS1, 3; MST1, 5; SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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Play Ball! (Grades 3-12 and adult groups)
Using America’s national pastime as a tool for teaching, a museum base ball player in 19th-century uniform engages your students in the history, culture, and strategies of stick-and-ball games. Specific activities are tailored to grade level and to whether the program is conducted indoors or outside.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
HPEFCS1, 2; SS1 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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Quilting (Grades 3-12 and adult groups)
Making a quilt was a way to help keep a 19th-century family warm, and it was also a means for artistic self-expression. Learning about quilts is a way to understand more about 19th-century American life, art, design, communication and even geometry. Our quilter shares 19th-century quilt patterns and demonstrates how quilts are put together. Students learn the importance and origins of quilting and how quilted items were used for a variety of purposes. |
| NYS Standards Met: |
A2, 3, 4; CDOS1; ELA1, 3, 4; MST1, 3, 5, 6, 7; SS1, 3 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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The Tinsmith (Grades 3-12 and adult groups)
In this inquiry-based program, our Genesee Country tinsmith brings some of his shiny wares as well as the tools he uses to make them so your students can see both process and result. Students are challenged to figure out how this technology was employed to solve specific problems and meet particular needs. The tinsmith also shares insights into his role in early American economies and compares it to that of his 21st-century counterpart – the hardware store.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
CDOS1, 2, 3b; HPEFCS2, 3; MST1, 3, 4, 5, 6; SS1, 4 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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The Little Red Schoolhouse (Grades 4-8 and adult groups)
Let us turn your classroom into a 19th-century oneroom schoolhouse. Our museum educator reminds students of the rules of discipline while guiding them through their lessons. They are asked to engage in cooperative learning, practice their penmanship, use a slate and read stories from a McGuffey reader.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
CDOS1, 2; ELA1, 2, 3, 4; MST3, 5, 6; SS1, 3, 4, 5 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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The General Store (Grades 4-12 and adult groups)
Armed with 19th-century wares and dry goods for your inspection, our storekeeper introduces your students to this uniquely American institution that gave flavor and personality to 19th-century villages. Your students learn about the general storekeeper’s multifaceted role in the community and how the store contributed to an area’s settlement. Modifiable to meet your students’ particular needs, the program is an engaging way to learn about world wide trade, household and business economics, pricing systems, profit margins and customer service – 19th-century style. |
| NYS Standards Met: |
CDOS1, 2; MST1, 3, 5, 6; SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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Objects from History (Grades 4-12 and adult groups)
Our museum educator brings unusual and everyday objects from the 19th century to your classroom. Students have the opportunity to examine the objects and discover on their own how people devised technological solutions to meet their specific needs. This program provides ample opportunities to compare the tools and constructs of the past with those of today, and is an excellent starting point for further research.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
ELA1, 3, 4; HPEFCS2, 3; LOTE2; MST1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7; SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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Wildlife of the Genesee Country (Grades 4-12 and adult groups)
A visit from our museum naturalist helps your students learn about the animals native to the Genesee Country and how and why wildlife populations changed with the advent of Euro-American settlement. This history-based nature program provides students with plenty of opportunities to examine animal skulls, bones and skins as well as live specimens.
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| NYS Standards Met: |
HPEFCS2, 3; MST1, 4, 5, 6, 7; SS1, 3 |
| Dates Offered: |
November through February |
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History in the Kitchen (Grades 7-12 and adult groups)
A museum cook shows how she uses 19th-century cookbooks, household inventories, diaries, and letters to recreate menus of the past and to understand how people prepared, stored and served their food. She brings receipts (recipes) as well as examples of cookware and other kitchen utensils to illustrate this most “tasteful” approach to learning about the past. |
| NYS Standards Met: |
CDOS1; ELA1, 3, 4; HPEFCS1, 2, 3; MST1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7; SS1, 3 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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The Language of Flowers (Grades 7-12 and adult groups)
Learn about one of the most enchanting customs of the 19th century–communicating through flowers instead of words. From the four-leaf clover to the red rose, each was used to communicate a specific thought or feeling. Our museum educator brings examples of flowers and engages your students in making 19th-century-style tussie mussies (bouquets).
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| NYS Standards Met: |
ELA1, 2, 3, 4; LOTE1, 2; SS1 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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Victorian Yuletide (Grades 7-12 and adult groups)
Festive seasonal decorating flourished in Victorian America, and preparations began months in advance. Using historical documentation reflecting the cultural origins of various Victorian holiday traditions, a museum educator facilitates your students’ recreation of the spirit and charm of 19th-century yuletide celebrations
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| NYS Standards Met: |
A2, 3, 4; LOTE2; MST1, 5, 6; SS1 |
| Dates Offered: |
Year Round |
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