Anonymous wrote:Smithsonian Environmental Research Center is an awesome field trip.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our 2nd graders go to Seneca Schoolhouse, in Poolesville, MD, and get the experience of being in a one-room school in the 1880s. It is absolutely fantastic. The lady who runs it is top notch. Lots of actual education, experience, and a side of entertainment. Lots of reports of it as a favorite all-time field trip. I lucked into being a chaperone for one kid, and you better believe I was waiting at midnight for the sign-up sheet to drop for chaperones for my next kid's class. Hosts up to 28 kids, I think easily adaptable through to 6th grade. Maybe higher, but you'd need to check with the lady who runs it.
https://www.historicmedley.org/visit/seneca-schoolhouse/
Slightly less exciting, off the beaten path trips that either went well or I was told went well:
Virginia Arboretum (3rd)
Overnight trip to Port Isobel Island, in the middle of the Chesapeake Bay. (8th)
Huntley Meadows Park, raised trail goes through wetlands. Lots of turtles, birds, snakes, frogs, etc. (3rd)
Air and Space Museum Annex (3rd)
Overnight @ Camp Highroad (7/8)
Museum of the Bible plays (Horse and His Boy, Pilgrim's Progress, others) (4-6)
Ford's Theatre (6)
Hidden Pond Nature Center for an "Erosion Hike, Rocks & Minerals Talk, and a Pond Netting" (2)
Washington National Cathedral (5/6)
Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land in Washington DC (5)
Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception (5)
Gunston Hall (4)
I am blanking on a bunch of others. I feel like I should've been keeping better track.
Also a day trip to Jamestown + Williamsburg in 4th grade. It is a long day, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids went to wastewater treatment plant, Gettysburg, and Sandy Spring Adventure Center for high ropes course.
Ooo... more details on the wastewater treatment plant, please. I didn't know that was possible.
Anonymous wrote:Kids went to wastewater treatment plant, Gettysburg, and Sandy Spring Adventure Center for high ropes course.
Anonymous wrote:Rochambeau elementary students do:
Eighth grade trip to London
Fifth grade trip to Paris
Fourth grade trip to Montreal
(80% of each class attends)
Third grade is too little for international travel sans parents.
Anonymous wrote:Our 2nd graders go to Seneca Schoolhouse, in Poolesville, MD, and get the experience of being in a one-room school in the 1880s. It is absolutely fantastic. The lady who runs it is top notch. Lots of actual education, experience, and a side of entertainment. Lots of reports of it as a favorite all-time field trip. I lucked into being a chaperone for one kid, and you better believe I was waiting at midnight for the sign-up sheet to drop for chaperones for my next kid's class. Hosts up to 28 kids, I think easily adaptable through to 6th grade. Maybe higher, but you'd need to check with the lady who runs it.
https://www.historicmedley.org/visit/seneca-schoolhouse/
Slightly less exciting, off the beaten path trips that either went well or I was told went well:
Virginia Arboretum (3rd)
Overnight trip to Port Isobel Island, in the middle of the Chesapeake Bay. (8th)
Huntley Meadows Park, raised trail goes through wetlands. Lots of turtles, birds, snakes, frogs, etc. (3rd)
Air and Space Museum Annex (3rd)
Overnight @ Camp Highroad (7/8)
Museum of the Bible plays (Horse and His Boy, Pilgrim's Progress, others) (4-6)
Ford's Theatre (6)
Hidden Pond Nature Center for an "Erosion Hike, Rocks & Minerals Talk, and a Pond Netting" (2)
Washington National Cathedral (5/6)
Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land in Washington DC (5)
Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception (5)
Gunston Hall (4)
I am blanking on a bunch of others. I feel like I should've been keeping better track.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Overnight trip to Williamsburg/Jamestown, and while DC has graduated I saw in FB that they did one to Birmingham AL this year. For field trips, there’s no way I can remember them all. Various Smithsonian/National Gallery trips, the Word Museum, Lincoln’s Cottage, that sort of thing.
I’m this pp. literally just noticed that the OP asked for elementary. The multi day Wmsburg/Jamestown trip was MS. Elementary had day trips. In addition to what I noted above (which again, were MS, but DC went to a lot of the same places in ES with a different school), local parks, a Native American demonstration, a play at the Kennedy Center, National Zoo, an apple/pumpkin farm place every year, and a local bakery. Probably some others - DC is in HS now and I can’t remember everything.
Anonymous wrote:OMG these are wealthy districts.
We had one field trip period in k-6.