Tours and Programs for Social Studies
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Social Studies
From history and geography to economics, government and civics, we can help your students connect to social studies through ?rsthand experiences they can’t forget. Our historic village provides settings for the stories of a full century of America’s past, and we encourage students to observe, re?ect, question and decide. We use a variety of techniques – from playlets and hands-on experiences to demonstrations and Q&A – to engage students in multidisciplinary learning, and our 100-year-long perspective facilitates the investigation of interdependence, continuity and change, and identi?cation of patterns through time.
With works of art spanning four centuries, the John L. Wehle Art Gallery can serve as another effective resource for social studies. Art re?ects the social and cultural environment within which it is created and so can serve as a window to different places and times. The Southwest collection of pottery, weavings, baskets and jewelry as well as extraordinary paintings and sculptures is particularly relevant to studies of Native American cultures.
The Genesee Country Nature Center can help students understand the history of people on the landscape over the past 200 years. Guided hikes on trails that crisscross previously farmed land as well as meadows and woodlands are structured to foster your students’ individual exploration and discovery.
NYS Learning Standards:
SS1: History of the United States and New York
SS2: World History
SS3: Geography
SS4: Economics
SS5: Civics, Citizenship and Government
Self-Guided Tours |
| Self Guided Tours of the Historic Village Visit the historic village and take an exciting journey of discovery into the past. History comes alive as students spend time at homes, trades, businesses and public buildings that are most relevant to your curriculum plans and their interests. Use your Educator’s Preview Pass for a free advance visit, and then design a tour on which your students investigate, compare and contrast lives of 200 years ago with their own. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Mid-May through mid-October, Tuesdays – Fridays |
| Enrichment Options: | |
| Long May It Wave (Grades 4-8) In this educator-led tour of our exhibit, Long May It Wave: The Story of Our Star-Spangled Banner, students learn about the history and surprising global connections of the ultimate symbol of American pride – our country’s flag. Students also design and produce their own banners using guidelines similar to those provided by Congress in 1777. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 5 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
| 19th-Century Games (Grades 3-12) Fun and leisure were important parts of children’s lives in the 19th century, just as they are today. However, the toys and games were often made at home and operated under child power instead of batteries. A session of structured kinesthetic activities invites students to try their skill at skittles, stilts, graces, rolling a hoop, cup-and-ball, the whimmy-diddle, buzz saw and much more. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
| Art of the American Southwest (Grades 3-12) This museum educator-led tour highlights the gallery’s extensive collection of art of the American Southwest, featuring paintings, sculpture, rugs, jewelry and pottery. It is designed for integration into curriculum units addressing Native American culture and identity, natural and cultural environments of the Southwest, and art as a form of cultural expression. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4, 5 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
| History Mysteries (Grades 3-12) Do your students know how to use a boot jack – or what’s inside a tinderbox? In this program they’ll examine unusual and everyday objects from the 19th century to discover how people devised technological solutions to meet their needs. Students will have the opportunity to handle period objects and make comparisons to the tools and constructs of today. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
| Wildlife of the Genesee Country (Grades 4-12) Your students will 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 opportunities to examine animal skulls, bones and skins as well as live specimens. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring – afternoons only |
| Architecture (Grades 7-12) Genesee Country Village & Museum was originally founded as a museum of architecture. Buildings were carefully chosen from all over western New York for their architectural or historical significance and relocated to their present sites. Students will learn to recognize distinguishing characteristics of buildings in log house, salt-box, cobblestone, Georgian, Federal, Greek Revival and Victorian Italianate styles. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
Museum Educator-Guided Tours of the Historic Village |
| Take a specially designed tour of the 19h century with a museum educator. Each guided tour is approximately two hours long, and content is adaptable for your specific grade level. Students will be divided into grops of about 20 each, and groups will rotate among the historic structures. |
| Early 19th-Century Lifeways Students will travel through a century of American life. Compare homes and children's lives from the beginning to the end of the century. Visit with a tradesman who will demonstrate the latest developments in 19th century technology. Find out how early residents relied upon local business to provide commerce and communication. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Early May and late October, Tuesdays-Fridays |
| Theme Tours Do you and your students have a particular interest? We can design a tour around a theme, such as architecture, horticulture, kitchens, textiles and trades. Please call us at (585) 538-6822 x216 to discuss your particular needs and interests. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Early May and late October, Tuesdays-Fridays |
| Pioneer Chore Tour (Grades 7-8 only) Your middle school students will expend excess energy on this custom guided tour! Select from physical activities, such as building a fence, churning butter, and sawing wood. Watch our tradesmen at work and make a tin ornament. Learn about 19th-century hygiene and make a sweet bag. There may even be time for lessons at the schoolhouse and games on the Village Square. Please call us at (585) 538-6822 x216 to discuss your particular needs and interests. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Early May and late October, Tuesdays – Fridays (Additional dates available by special arrangement) |
Focused Field Study |
| Teacher-developed and student-tested, Genesee Country Village & Museum Focused Field Studies provide immersive experiences for your students and allow you to direct attention to specific topics that coordinate with your curriculum plan. Your students will work in small groups with museum staff in settings especially created to facilitate understanding and skill development. Field experiences vary but may include doing chores, cooking, interviewing specialists, drawing and sketching, collecting and analyzing samples, or performing. When you choose a themed Focused Field Study, you’ll receive a study guide especially developed for that topic. Each includes pre-visit activities to prepare your students for their field experience as well as post-visit activities for use as follow-throughs or extensions. A historic context helps set the stage, and a topical bibliography of books, magazines, videos, and websites facilitates further exploration. Each guide also includes a vocabulary list, sample organizers and worksheets for copying as needed. |
| Abolition: African-American Life in 19th-Century America (Grades 4-8) This unit employs varied settings and techniques of engagement to introduce students to the issue of abolition and its impact on the lives of African Americans living in the Genesee Country. Students explore the working conditions of both slaves and freed men and women and connect to songs and stories of the Underground Railroad. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4, 5 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
| Businesses and Professions in 19th-Century America (Grades 4-8) This unit uses a variety of settings to introduce students to ways people made a living in 19th-century America. They spend time visiting a family-owned inn for travelers, where they pitch in and help prepare for the next group of guests, and a general store, where they process inventory, sort mail, wrap packages and more to convince the storekeeper that they would make a fine clerk. Students may also interview specialists to find out what training, skills, and tools were needed to pursue jobs – some familiar and some not. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
| Crafts and Trades in 19th-Century America (Grades 4-8) This unit facilitates students’ exploration of how 19th century Americans met their communities’ needs and wants and how this changed through time in concert with advances in communication, transportation and technology. Students in small groups visit trades or crafts to determine the resources and process required to produce an item, the basic needs the item met, and the modes of its distribution. In each case, students have opportunities to perform at least one step in the production process they observe. Later, students visit village buildings to identify examples of the trades and crafts they documented in the morning and to determine how they were used, by whom and how regularly. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
| School, Work and Play: A Child’s Life Experienced in 19th-Century America (Grades 4-8) A 19th-century child’s life was a mix of school, work and play – just as a 21st-century child’s life is – but there were differences too. This unit focuses on the activities that engaged children over 100 years ago. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
| Switchel, Cole Cannon and Pudding: Food in 19th-Century America (Grades 4-8) This interdisciplinary unit uses food as a way to examine 19th-century American life. By participating in food-related activities at a series of homes from different times in the 1800s, students collect information that enables them to consider change through time and to compare and contrast the 19th century with the one in which they live today. Students will participate in a hands-on cooking activity and visit other kitchens to learn about ingredients and their sources, cooking and food-preservation technology, resource utilization, and relationships between food and culture. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
| We the People: Government and Civic Responsibility in 19th-Century America (Grades 4-8) This unit engages students in considering the role of civic leaders in 19th-century America with relevance to our world today. Using primary documents and true-to-the-day issues, students engage in role-playing and decision-making. There are options for delivering speeches and interviewing village staff as a means for understanding the role of local government and citizen involvement. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
| Life in the Burned-Over District: Church and Community in 19th-Century America (Grades 7-12) This unit will explore some of the various religious groups that made the Genesee Country their home. Students will explore places of worship and learn about what each faith believed, how they were involved in the community, who belonged to the group, and what major forces were shaping the group at the time. Students will participate in an activity or demonstration that illustrates each group’s identity and beliefs. Throughout this experience, students will focus on similarities and differences and how diversity created a vibrant community. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 5 |
| Dates Offered: | Fall and Spring |
Outdoor Science Programs at Genesee Country Nature Center |
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Finding Your Way (Grades 4-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
Focused Field Studies at Genesee Country Nature Center |
| Sap, Syrup & Sugar (Grades K-12) This popular program traces the history and science of maple sugaring from early American and present-day commercial production perspectives. Students hike to the sugar bush, learn why maple trees make sap, witness a 19th-century sugaring demonstration, talk with a modern-day syrup maker and taste the final product. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Mondays – Fridays in March |
Seasonal Programs |
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Home for the Holidays (Grades K-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Fridays TBD in December |
| Sap, Syrup & Sugar (Grades K-12) This popular program traces the history and science of maple sugaring from early American and present-day commercial production perspectives. Students hike to the sugar bush, learn why maple trees make sap, witness a 19th-century sugaring demonstration, talk with a modern-day syrup maker and taste the final product. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Mondays – Fridays in March |
Movable MuseumCan'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. |
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The Animal Kingdom (Preschool-Grade 3) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | |
| Dates Offered: | November through February |
| 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. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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Quilt Story (Preschool-Grade 3) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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Small Folks (Preschool-Grade 3) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
| 19th-Century Games (Grades 2-12) 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. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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19th-Century Music (Grades 2-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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19th-Century Dance (Grades 3-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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19th-Century Fashion (Grades 7-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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Play Ball! (Grades 3-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
| Quilting (Grades 3-12) 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. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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The Tinsmith (Grades 3-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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The Little Red Schoolhouse (Grades 4-8) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4, 5 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
| The General Store (Grades 4-12) 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. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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Objects from History (Grades 4-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 4 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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Wildlife of the Genesee Country (Grades 4-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3 |
| Dates Offered: | November through February |
| A Slave’s Narrative (Grades 5-12) Step back in time to witness an 1841 encounter between escaped slave and abolitionist William Wells Brown and a printer sympathetic to his cause. Will the printer publish Brown’s memoirs, Narrative of William W. Brown, an American Slave? The audience learns that while there are extreme risks associated with the abolitionist stance, none is as great as the risks taken by slaves to claim their freedom. The performance is followed by a question-and-answer session. Suitable for groups in a small assembly format. |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3, 5 |
| Dates Offered: | Limited Availability |
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History in the Kitchen (Grades 7-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1, 3 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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The Language of Flowers (Grades 7-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |
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Victorian Yuletide (Grades 7-12) |
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| NYS Standards Met: | SS1 |
| Dates Offered: | Year Round |



