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Personalize a building: Lesson Idea
Anthropomorphism is the attribution of human characteristics to non-human beings or things. This is exactly what the students use to observe and describe architectural heritage. Heritage also has an emotional side.
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Old and new: Lesson idea
On the basis of photos, the students compare the current state of immovable heritage with that of then.
- What are the differences and similarities?
- What source material can they use?
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Yper Museum: Guide
Guideline for teachers who visit the Yper Museum without a guide.
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On the outside: lesson card
The class explores the landscape around the school. Which elements determine a landscape? Think of its geographical, agricultural, cultural and other history. You can use photos and maps in class or go on a field trip.
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Underground: Lesson Idea
Students experience for themselves what archeology is through doing and thinking questions. How do excavations take place, what are archaeological traces and how did people live throughout history?
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Monument ID: Lesson Idea
The students view and analyze a monument from the school environment on the basis of specific questions. They fill out an ID sheet (added to lesson idea).
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Monument struggle in the classroom: Lesson idea
The class decides which historic building or other immovable heritage will be awarded. The students campaign for their favorite with a playful action, petition or a stunt.
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Monument Log: Lesson Idea
Visit and explore the same immovable heritage several years in a row and bond with it. For example, the students follow the evolution year after year, they record this in a log and they take measurements.
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Pack and go: Lesson file
How can you make the public look at heritage in a different way? Think of the artist Christo. The students broaden their expressiveness by artistically drawing attention to immovable heritage from the school environment.
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A bird's eye view: Lesson idea
The students start from aerial photographs and convert their observations into a floor plan or 3D representation. Scale, bird's eye view ... are discussed.
As an extra: how do you make a blueprint?
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I see, I see, what you don't see: Lesson Idea
The students study immovable heritage through different methodologies: try blindfolding (feeling the materials), drawing through a description of a fellow student, a text about your favorite place ...
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Looking at houses: Lesson idea
On a walk in the school environment, students learn to observe facades from very different periods. They make sketches, take pictures and also think about the architectural value of recent homes.
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