BuffJim Posted May 7, 2021 Share #1 Posted May 7, 2021 Mine was an international excursion to Crystal Beach Amusement Park outside of Fort Erie Ontario. Runner up was a trip to the Toronto Science Centre in 4th grade. Place was awesome. 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Razors Edge ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #2 Posted May 7, 2021 We rarely got "big" field trips as kids. My favorites that were "repeating" would always be the Franklin Institute and the Philly Zoo. I'd take kids to either nowadays as well. I don't remember any trips to Hershey Park or Great Adventure (or Dorney Park) as a field trip as a kid. I did enjoy Longwood Gardens as a kid, if only for being outside and being able to wander the estate. As a teen, the German club got to go to Disney World, so that was fun. Not sure how that even got arranged as we didn't go to any sort of competition or anything, just several days driving down, going to the two Disney resorts (Epcot and Magic Kingdom at that time), and a bunch of canoodling. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ChrisL Posted May 7, 2021 Share #3 Posted May 7, 2021 My 5th grade teacher was able to get our class admission to the King Tut exhibit in down town LA. That was pretty memorable. We also had an annual trip to our local tide pools which I enjoyed. Still do. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zealot Posted May 7, 2021 Share #4 Posted May 7, 2021 Thunderbird. 3rd or 4th grade. It’s the first thing that came to mind when I read your question. I remember digging for, and finding, arrowheads. I was very interested in archeology then. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thunderbird_Archaeological_District 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kzoo Posted May 7, 2021 Share #5 Posted May 7, 2021 Sixth grade - Carnegie Museum of Natural History and the Pittsburgh! Buhl Planetarium. A big day for a bunch of country kids. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zealot Posted May 7, 2021 Share #6 Posted May 7, 2021 Second is the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History. 5th grade. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kirby Posted May 7, 2021 Share #7 Posted May 7, 2021 We didn't do many at my school, but I still remember one we took to Philadelphia to see the Liberty Bell and Independence Hall. I think we also visited Betsy Ross's house which seems kind of anticlimactic after Indepence Hall. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
maddmaxx ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #8 Posted May 7, 2021 I went on only two during my school years. One was to the Museum of Science in Boston sometime in the 50's, As you can imagine it was much smaller then because there was far less science. The other was to Mystic Seaport in Mystic CT. That one was great because there was plenty of whaling science left back then. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AirwickWithCheese Posted May 7, 2021 Share #9 Posted May 7, 2021 Most memorable .. Sixth grade went somewhere near Brevard and a hippie commune sponsored/owned by Mother Earth News. Then on into Asheville for lunch in the city square park for a picnic. We came home on the bus in complete silence. Next day we all signed a pledge to forsake the foolishness and burned all of our rock and roll albums. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
2Far ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #10 Posted May 7, 2021 6th grade, we went to a bluff on Lake Erie & collected fossils. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dinneR ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #11 Posted May 7, 2021 I had a teacher take me and another kid to the Oregon coast, Banff NP, and Glacier NP. It took most of the summer. He called it his living scholarship. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffJim Posted May 7, 2021 Author Share #12 Posted May 7, 2021 1 minute ago, denniS said: I had a teacher take me and another kid to the Oregon coast, Banff NP, and Glacier NP. It took most of the summer. He called it his living scholarship. Can you imagine that happening nowadays? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dinneR ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #13 Posted May 7, 2021 Just now, BuffJim said: Can you imagine that happening nowadays? No. He started in the 50s and continued into the late 80s. He was aware of how it looked. The entire trip he was teaching. Talking about mountains etc. We went to Mt St. Helens into the red zone. He was a legend of a teacher. WWII vet. He passed away in 2020. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
maddmaxx ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #14 Posted May 7, 2021 I'm sure today there would be some sort of investigation. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Parsnip Totin Jack ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #15 Posted May 7, 2021 LA Zoo, Olivera Street, various Missions. The Griffith Onservatory. That’s all I remember. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zealot Posted May 7, 2021 Share #16 Posted May 7, 2021 1 hour ago, denniS said: I had a teacher take me and another kid to the Oregon coast, Banff NP, and Glacier NP. It took most of the summer. He called it his living scholarship. 1 hour ago, BuffJim said: Can you imagine that happening nowadays? 1 hour ago, denniS said: No. He started in the 50s and continued into the late 80s. He was aware of how it looked. The entire trip he was teaching. Talking about mountains etc. We went to Mt St. Helens into the red zone. He was a legend of a teacher. WWII vet. He passed away in 2020. 1 hour ago, maddmaxx said: I'm sure today there would be some sort of investigation. Truly sad that our world has devolved in so many ways. @denniS, glad you got the experience. Very cool. When I was young, we had a female teacher like that. She was amazing. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Razors Edge ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #17 Posted May 7, 2021 2 minutes ago, Zealot said: Truly sad that our world has devolved in so many ways. @denniS, glad you got the experience. Very cool. When I was young, we had a female teacher like that. She was amazing. This is similar to the "fear" stuff yesterday. I don't think it has "devolved" in that respect. There ARE folks who still do what that teacher and dennis did. It's just overshadowed by a perception that it doesn't or can't happen, not that it really does or doesn't. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zealot Posted May 7, 2021 Share #18 Posted May 7, 2021 1 minute ago, Razors Edge said: This is similar to the "fear" stuff yesterday. I don't think it has "devolved" in that respect. There ARE folks who still do what that teacher and dennis did. It's just overshadowed by a perception that it doesn't or can't happen, not that it really does or doesn't. Good point. But I’d be surprised to find a teacher today that would do this. Good people exist. To your point, it just gets overshadowed so much, whether from fears, media, isolation, etc... 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Razors Edge ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #19 Posted May 7, 2021 1 minute ago, Zealot said: Good point. But I’d be surprised to find a teacher today that would do this. Good people exist. To your point, it just gets overshadowed so much, whether from fears, media, isolation, etc... Mick is retired, I guess 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
maddmaxx ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #20 Posted May 7, 2021 There was an annual trip to Europe for the French club from the high school. I'm not sure if it still happens or not. It was usually one teacher and at least 2 chaperones for 10 to a dozen kids. There was nobody chaperoning the chaperones however. Yes, the kids noticed. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zealot Posted May 7, 2021 Share #21 Posted May 7, 2021 2 minutes ago, Razors Edge said: Mick is retired, I guess Was actually thinking about his post with regards to educators yesterday as well. And all that they have to think about and try to avoid. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dinneR ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #22 Posted May 7, 2021 8 minutes ago, Zealot said: Truly sad that our world has devolved in so many ways. @denniS, glad you got the experience. Very cool. When I was young, we had a female teacher like that. She was amazing. He continued doing it into retirement. He just took the kids of friends instead of students. I think in that way it could happen. Scouts or other organizations do it. A friend of mine took a HS student to AK for the Iditarod. He is taking the same kid to the Silk Road race. I'd guess the kid's parents are paying for it. My teacher paid for almost everything. I bought film for my camera and t-shirts for my friends. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MickinMD ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #23 Posted May 7, 2021 We had one in 8th Grade to the Gettysburg Battlefield that was a lot of fun and triggered in me a lifelong interest in the Civil War. In high school, we didn't have any field trips I remember. Our Varsity Club - varsity letter winners only - had a school room full of blue blazers with the school insignia over the pocket and we had to wear dress clothes and a tie with it. We, mostly low- and lower-middle-class kids, thought we looked like Naval Academy Midshipmen when we went to Orioles games, etc. as a group and felt very proud. One of the most memorable trips was to the first EVER basketball game between Navy and the Air Force Academy played at the Naval Academy in Annapolis in '67 or '68 - 1/2 hour from our school. Navy won. Two members of my high school class that were also there that night ended up going to Navy, one being wrestler Lloyd "Butch" Keaser who won a World Championships Gold Medal in 1973 and an Olympic Silver Medal in 1976. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JerrySTL ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #24 Posted May 7, 2021 8th grade trip to Frankfort Kentucky to see the state capital. The highlight was on the way home when the bus went over a train crossing at a high rate of speed. Kids bounced everywhere. One poor girl was on the toilet at the back of the bus. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ralphie ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #25 Posted May 7, 2021 Cedar Point. i don't have much memory of it though. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allen ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #26 Posted May 7, 2021 My boarding school had a weekend excursion to a local campground that had swimming holes and shoals you could slide down. There was a pot field in the woods just on the other side of the river. We found it and stripped it like starving locusts. The dorms stunk of green crappy weed until Christmas break. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Longjohn ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #27 Posted May 7, 2021 I was a baby boomer, my schools were too busy trying to build schools as fast as the class size was growing. The only field trip I was aware of was the senior trip to Washington DC. It was good, when you know it’s one and done and you have twelve years to plan your shenanigans it was pretty wild. I don’t know how long we were in Washington, it felt like a week, was at least three or four days. I was ashamed of the way my class behaved. You can have fun and do wild stuff without damaging property or stealing stuff. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sheep_herder ★ Posted May 7, 2021 Share #28 Posted May 7, 2021 Not sure we went on any field trips. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thaddeus Kosciuszko Posted May 8, 2021 Share #29 Posted May 8, 2021 My most memorable school field trip was when I was driving a bus filled with obnoxious, disrespectful, loud-mouth middle school punks to Frankfort, KY. On the way home I took a railroad crossing at high speed, and thankfully that shut them up for the rest of the trip. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Airehead Posted May 8, 2021 Share #30 Posted May 8, 2021 12 hours ago, Razors Edge said: We rarely got "big" field trips as kids. My favorites that were "repeating" would always be the Franklin Institute and the Philly Zoo. I'd take kids to either nowadays as well. I don't remember any trips to Hershey Park or Great Adventure (or Dorney Park) as a field trip as a kid. I did enjoy Longwood Gardens as a kid, if only for being outside and being able to wander the estate. As a teen, the German club got to go to Disney World, so that was fun. Not sure how that even got arranged as we didn't go to any sort of competition or anything, just several days driving down, going to the two Disney resorts (Epcot and Magic Kingdom at that time), and a bunch of canoodling. Franklin institute was great. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Road Runner Posted May 8, 2021 Share #31 Posted May 8, 2021 Not really a field trip, but as a member of my high school marching band, we got to go and play the halftime at a Baltimore Colts game. 1964. I don't remember who they were playing. We sat on the field behind the Colts team benches and had a poor view of the game. But I do remember seeing my childhood hero, Johnny Unitas, playing football from a very close distance. I also remember seeing Raymond Berry and Jimmy Orr. For the most part, playing in the marching band sucked, but that was a pretty cool trip for a high school kid back in those days. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ralphie ★ Posted May 8, 2021 Share #32 Posted May 8, 2021 7 hours ago, Road Runner said: Not really a field trip, but as a member of my high school marching band, we got to go and play the halftime at a Baltimore Colts game. 1964. I don't remember who they were playing. We sat on the field behind the Colts team benches and had a poor view of the game. But I do remember seeing my childhood hero, Johnny Unitas, playing football from a very close distance. I also remember seeing Raymond Berry and Jimmy Orr. For the most part, playing in the marching band sucked, but that was a pretty cool trip for a high school kid back in those days. I went to Philthydelphia for the bicentennial celebration with the town band that had recruited a ton of us high school kids. It was fun. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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