Virtual Field Trips: How Interactive Learning Has Evolved In The Pandemic Age – KERA News

Posted By on December 16, 2020

A group of Dallas high school students recently fired up their laptops, tablets and phones for a virtual visit to the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum.

The field trip started like any of the thousands held every year at the facility, with the museums top educator leading the way.

Good morning everybody, my name is Claire," Claire Robinson said. "Im the Senior Museum Educator at the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum.

Robinson stood at the entrance of the museums Shoah wing, which focuses on World War II and the Holocaust.

The class taking the virtual tour included 16 juniors and seniors from Dallas Thomas Jefferson High School. They were all online, watching Robinson through a video feed handled by a colleague.

Keren Carrin

Robinson continued her introduction, facing an iPad as she addressed the students.

Were going to ask to keep your videos off because that helps the connection when were in the exhibit," she explained.

With the help of a little technology, this field trip was nearly identical to what students would've experienced if they were there in person. At other museums, some virtual field trips usually gallery tours are pre-produced and pre-packaged. This visit, however, preserves live interaction.

Keren Carrin

My first question for you, Robinson asked the students, Has anybody heard of the holocaust and if so, what words do you associate with the holocaust?

Students delivered answers through their devices. Jews, said one. Good, Robinson said.

Gas chambers, said another student. Genocide," said another. Great word, Robinson replied.

On screen, she started walking through the exhibit, detailing how Hitlers anti-Semitic rage and his ability to infect others with inhumane hate led to the infamous concentration camps. But Robinson explained that killing squads came first.

So as the German army moves east and takes over territory after territory, theres a group of men that follow the German army, and theyre called the Einsatzgruppe, mobile killing squad, Robinson said. They would get to that town, they would round up all the Jews living in that community, with the help of the local neighbors right? Because they dont know whos Jewish

Keren Carrin

Those squads would shoot them, Robinson said, after the victims were forced to dig their own graves. Two million were murdered this way, she said, standing in front of a map showing where mass graves have been found. Theyre represented by bullets, not stick pins. More than 80 years since these crimes happened, graves continue to be discovered.

Its a lot.

Thomas Jefferson Senior Danna Reyna first learned of the Holocaust in school, years ago.

As a kid, Danna said, you dont expect that kind of hate in the world. It was kind of like shocking there was a lot of hate in the people to actually go and murder one whole population And still now with this tour, its still now pretty shocking.

Shock is partly the point. A tenet of the museum encourages action. Urging visitors dont just be a bystander become what the museum calls an upstander.

Mary Pat Higgins, the museum's CEO, said the field trip gives students an opportunity for self-reflection and action in their own lives.

We know from past experience, if we can get students to come to the museum and go through this experience we can help them think about the dangers of unchecked prejudice and hatred," Higgins said. "And we can inspire them to stand up to it when it occurs in their daily lives."

Keren Carrin

Since student groups still arent visiting the museum in person because of COVID-19, online visits will have to suffice and Southern Methodist University professor Rick Halperin says they work. As the director of SMUs Human Rights Program, hes taken students to see Nazi death camps in Europe, and to civil rights landmarks in the American south.

Even via Zoom, it does allow us as educators to present material, so students can at least stop saying 'I didnt know'. We can at least bring the awakening issue to students," Halperin said. "Its just not ideal but its better than not doing it.

Halperin said these digital tours remain both intensely important and enlightening, especially during the dark days of a pandemic.

Got a tip? Email Reporter Bill Zeeble at bzeeble@kera.org. You can follow him on Twitter @bzeeble.

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Virtual Field Trips: How Interactive Learning Has Evolved In The Pandemic Age - KERA News

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