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November 22, 2008  

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Trippin'

Talent Unlimited HS students Lauren Nye (left) and Tiffannie Wallace, who studied all year to be summer docents at the Folk Museum, provide plenty of details about the exhibit for teenage visitors.

Adele Unterberger, who has been teaching for 37 years and organizing class trips almost that long, couldn’t say enough about how supportive of teachers and public schools the Met is. She described slide presentations to meet specific teacher requests, professional development programs and “lunch-and-learn programs” held at schools in all the boroughs. And she also spoke of how the toughest kids from her lower East Side school, PS 134, “cannot believe the beauty of the museums’ main lobby or the vast extent of the collections.”

Students visiting the newly renovated Ellis Island Museum can trace the arrival in America of their relatives from among the 22 million immigrants processed through the Island between 1892 and 1954. They can see examples of the bigotry each ethnic group faced and activate giant displays showing facts and figures about each wave of immigrants.

At the Lower East Side Tenement Museum, students actually see how their immigrant ancestors lived and talk to staff members in period dress who portray family members and answer questions about life at that time.

Teacher Debbie Ganeles of PS 178 called her tenement trips from Queens with 4th-graders “wonderfully visual and experiential. The children are so hungry to go places, and here they were able to see and understand about sweat shops and whole families doing piece work at home after work.”

Last year, 26,415 school children dropped in on the 1916 apartment of the Sephardic-Jewish Confino family, the 1870 German-Jewish Gumpertz family and the 1930 apartment of the Sicilian-Catholic Baldizzi family. Visitors even celebrated an 1897 home birth and paid a shiva call to a family mourning the loss of Abraham, who worked as a garment factory presser and died of tuberculosis in 1918.

In historic Richmond Town on Staten Island, classes can get a real taste of life in old New York from colonial 1690s to the industrial 1890s.

To see how immigrants got here, book a ride on a masted schooner from the South Street Seaport Museum.

At a recent open house for teachers at the American Folk Museum, teachers toured the exhibits in the architecturally fascinating building and learned they can request specific kinds of classroom materials and tours for their classes.

A funded program at CS 211 in Brooklyn brings the Met to the school and the children to the Met. Four 4th-grade classes and their teachers — two general education, one bilingual and one special education — are participating in a yearlong art history program that “supports the curriculum in every way, is culturally fantastic and touches us in every way,” according to teacher Ida Kivelevich.

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