How Your Kids (And You!) Can Learn And Explore the World For Free While Quarantined
By Dulce Ruby
- The Facts: With the whole world going through a collective event, some of us are looking for ways to keep busy, and keep our children learning. Many companies, museums, organizations, and institutions have created free online offerings for us.
- Reflect On: There’s a lot going on, but we can take this time to rethink how we go about our day-to-day as well as a moment to breathe and connect with our family and most importantly, ourselves.
As a frequent traveler, museum-goer, and lover of all things mind-expanding, this quarantine at first glance could feel like doom. Sure, for the most part, we all have to stay home and keep to ourselves.. but at the same time – for the most part, WE GET TO STAY HOME AND KEEP TO OURSELVES!
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If YOU are looking for ways to continue learning or seeking to expand your mind
Class Central and Coursera have curated an incredible list of free online courses and classes you can take to dive deeper into your education and explore new heights!
More Art-Inclined Offerings
(This portion of our list was originally posted on Condé Nast Traveler)
Head to the museum
“A number of museums have virtual tours available online—including the Louvre, which offers a tour through its Egyptian antiquities department and the recently restored Galerie d’Apollon, and Madrid’s Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, which has its Rembrandt and Portraiture in Amsterdam, 1590-1670 exhibit on virtual view. The Vatican Museums offer 360-degree tours of the Sistine Chapel, Raphael’s Rooms and more, and the Smithsonian also has a self-guided tour (albeit a little clunky) of the National Museum of Natural History in New York.
If you don’t need to see the art in context of a wall, head to Google’s Arts and Culture collections, where works from museums like the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, and the Tate Modern in London are all on view. It might not be quite the same as seeing the works in person—but the zoom will get you closer to the art than any museum docent ever will. There are also virtual tours of sorts (less freewheeling around the galleries, more history lesson) of places like the Uffizi Galleries available.
Take the kids to the virtual aquarium
The teams at Boston’s New England Aquarium and Monterey Bay Aquarium are bringing the day-to-day life of its residents to the public, offering scheduled Facebook Live–access to feedings, tours, behind-the-scenes looks, and more. So far, we’ve gotten to see Myrtle, the green sea turtle, eat some breakfast (a delicious mix of lettuce, broccoli, and Brussels sprouts), and learned all about epaulette sharks and stingrays. (For parents needing some kid-friendly distractions, head to the aquarium’s at-home activities sections.)
Blast some music
Symphonies around the world are streaming live rather than cancelling their performances entirely, or are replaying old shows for free online. The Philharmonie Berlin is closed until April 19, but has opened its digital library of performances, filled with more than 600 shows. Use the code BERLINPHIL by March 31 to get 30-day access to the orchestra’s stunning work (look for performances conducted by Simon Rattle, the orchestra’s principal for 16 years). The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra is live-streaming its performances on YouTube, as it is closed to the public until April 13. While the 7 p.m. AEDT (or 4 a.m. EDT) showtimes may not be an ideal time to watch a symphony performance, you can re-watch the show later on the orchestra’s YouTube channel. So far, they’ve hosted performances of Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade, with plans for more throughout the closure.
Spend a night at the opera
If you’ve gone to a movie theater in recent years, you’ve likely seen a trailer for the Metropolitan Opera’s Live in HD series, where they throw the storied opera’s most popular performances onto movie screens for all to enjoy. Since most theaters—of both the opera and movie variety—are closed, the Met is opening that series up to all, streaming live each night. Each performance will become available at 7:30 p.m. EDT and will be viewable for 20 hours.
If you don’t want to be tied down by a schedule, OperaVision offers free recorded performances from all over the world, including Madama Butterfly from the Royal Swedish Opera and Tosca at the Polish National Opera.” – CTT
More Worldly Explorations
Here is a list of landmarks you can ‘visit’ via virtual tours!
- Great Wall of China
- Petra Jordan
- Angkor Wat, Cambodia
- Stonehenge
- Taj Mahal
- Machu Picchu
- Athens, Greece
And there are SO MANY MORE! If you find yourself going through all of these, you can always search online for others as it seems so many museums, travel boards, and organizations are following suit!
The Takeaway
Again, I find it important to reiterate that though these are rare times we are being faced with, it is up to us to reveal how we wish to see these unfoldings manifest in our reality. Continue to do your part in being kind to others and yourself, take care of your health and that of those around you by living simply and calmly, and most importantly – remain at peace with what is, and allow what is coming to continue to flow with the knowing that we are doing the best we can with where we are and what we have available to us.
May we take this time to dive deep into ourselves, our bonds, and our creativity to further explore who we are as a people, and who we wish to be as individuals. Now more than ever we are given the opportunity to really expand and evolve. How are you coming out of this pandemic cocoon?
See you on the other side, beautiful butterfly!
Article source: Collective Evolution
As an explorer and artist of written, visual and audio formats, Dulce Ruby aims to connect the connected through travel of both inner & outer worlds. She is the founder of Soultraveler.co and an international meditation guide who has hosted retreats & events for big brands like LUSH Cosmetics, British Polo Day, Alex & Ani, and more!
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