Meet the Meat Eaters
Stomp, chomp and roar like a dinosaur! In this playful program, little learners will explore what makes meat-eating dinosaurs so special through creative movement, hands-on-play and fun activity stations.
Discover, imagine and connect with the past through our interactive, curriculum- connected programs. Designed for Kindergarten to Secondary School, each 2-hour program combines inquiry, creativity, and hands-on learning.
Length: 2 hours
Start times: Morning or afternoon; earliest start 9:30 a.m.
Supervisors: No charge for teachers or adult volunteers
Subsidies: Available for City of Peterborough schools (ask when booking); please note there is no remaining subsidy for 2025 bookings.
Fees (Permanant Programs)
2025: $7 per student / $70 minimum per group
2026: $8 per student / $80 minimum per group
Evenings/Weekends: $140 minimum per group (2025) → $190 minimum per group (2026)
(Featured Exhibition Program pricing listed below in program descriptions)
Contact our Education and Program Officer at fstanley@peterborough.ca
In your email, please include:
Preferred month or specific date options
Preferred start time (morning or afternoon)
Program(s) you wish to book
Grade level(s)
Number of students
Name of school
Step into a world ruled by sharp teeth, powerful claws, and prehistoric beasts!
To complement our new exhibition Carnivorous Dinosaurs, on loan from Research Casting International, we are offering three exciting, curriculum-connected school programs.
Each program is designed to bring the fascinating world of theropods to life through age-appropriate activities that blend discovery, creativity, and hands-on learning. Curriculum tie-ins to Science and Technology.
Available to book starting October 27, 2025, to March 12, 2026
Fee: $11 per student (HST incl.), subsidy may be available for 2026 bookings for qualifying schools. No fee for teachers or adult volunteers. (Evening & Weekend Programs, $190 minimum).
Time: Bookings available in the morning or afternoon, starting as early as 9:30 am. Program is 2 hours long.
Meet the Meat Eaters
Stomp, chomp and roar like a dinosaur! In this playful program, little learners will explore what makes meat-eating dinosaurs so special through creative movement, hands-on-play and fun activity stations.
Tooth and Claw: Adaptations of Carnivores
Get up close with the fiercest predators of the dinosaur world! In this interactive program, students will learn how to "read" a dinosaur skull to uncover its survival secrets, hunt for clues in a carnivore-themed scavenger hunt and rotate through discovery centers. Explore how sharp teeth, powerful jaws, and deadly claws made carnivores kings of the Mesozoic!
Fossil Casting Workshop
Step into the shoes of a paleontologist! Students will investigate how fossils are formed and how scientists study them to learn about prehistoric life. Using real tools and techniques, each participant will create their own fossil cast to take home, while exploring the evidence dinosaurs left behind.
Digging Through Time: Exploring the Mesozoic
Travel back to the age of the dinosaurs! In this hands-on program, students become paleontologists as they uncover fossils and bones in a simulated dig site. Working together, they'll piece together their discoveries, then use clues to determine which time period of the Mesozoic Era - Triassic, Jurassic, or Cretaceous- the fossils came from. Along the way, they'll learn how scientists used evidence to understand life millions of years ago.
The following programs are available for booking any time during the school year. Each program has curriculum tie-ins to Social Studies and cross-curricular connections include Science and Technology, Language and Mathemetics.
Playtimes Past – Explore the simple pleasures of traditional toys and games. Discover play in Indigenous and early settler life. (Permanent exhibit)
Playtimes Past (Grade 1) - explore the simple pleasures of traditional toys and games. Discover play in Indigenous and early settler life.
Jump into Geometry (Grade 1- 2) – Let's do some math as the museum! Through our quilt collection, students will become detectives as they search for a variety of shapes and patterns. The program concluded with four hands-on math centers.
Simple Machines (Grade 2) – What is it? How does it work? Through a variety of hands on-learning activities, students will decode the ways in which wheels, pulleys, levers, and screws combine to make work easier.
Early Settlement (Grade 3 - 4) – Travel through time to discover the history of Peterborough/Nogojiwanong. Students learn about the First Nations who have long called this land home, sail aboard the immigrant ship John Barry, and step into the shoes of Peter Robinson settlers through hands-on activity centers exploring early settler life.
Anishinaabe Storytelling and Teachings (Grades 3-4-5) – Discover Anishinaabe teachings as we explore the rich tradition of storytelling! In this interactive program, students will engage in role play to learn and retell a story, sharing it with their peers. Together, we will reflect on the meaningful teachings each story holds about life, nature, and community.
Anishinaabe Storytelling and Teachings (Grades 3-4-5) – Discover Anishinaabe teachings as we explore the rich tradition of storytelling! In this interactive program, students will engage in role play to learn and retell a story, sharing it with their peers. Together, we will reflect on the meaningful teachings each story holds about life, nature, and community.
Literacy at the Museum (Grades 4-5-6) – If an artifact could speak, what would it say? Students will learn how to "read" an artifact and use their imaginations to tell its story.
Archaeology (Grades 4-5-6) – Students experience the excitement of a real dig as they uncover artifacts and discover stories from the past.
History Mystery (Grades 5–6) – The adventure begins with a map to your very own treasure check! Students use primary source documents such as photographs, letters and artifacts to investigate and tell the stories of Peterborough's heritage.
Immigration Stories (Grade 6) – The story begins in the Museum's permeant exhibitions with indigenous migrations, Treaty 20, and the arrival of the region's earliest European settlers. Students then discover the personal stories of the 1825 Peter Robinson immigrants from Ireland through role play and archival documents.
PMA Collection: Interpreting Artifacts and Photographs
Designed specifically for intermediate & high school students, this hands-on program offers a unique opportunity to engage directly with items from the Peterborough Museum & Archives (PMA) collection. Participants will delve into the roles of curators and archivists, learning how to analyze and interpret artifacts and photographs like museum professionals. Through interactive activities, students will develop critical thinking skills, uncovering the stories behind each item and understanding their significance in Peterborough's heritage.
Frequently asked questions
See below for the most frequently asked questions regarding field trips.
Can two classes attend the same program together?
Unfortunately, no. Our programs can only accommodate one class at a time.
However, if you are wishing to visit with another class please see options below:
1. One class could complete an education program that takes place in the exhibit while the second class completes a program that takes place in the classroom.
2. One class could visit in the morning while the second class visits in the afternoon.
3. Plan a full day visit by selection two programs! For this option, class one would complete a program in the exhibit while class two completes a program in the classroom. Both classes would eat lunch together, and then do the opposite program in the afternoon. Total time needed for this option is 5 hours.
If interested in one of the above, please let the Education & Program officer know at time of booking.
Can we use the heritage pavilion?
If available, yes.
Please let us know at time of booking that you would like to use the pavilion, and we will book the space on your behalf. Fees may apply.
No. However, we do have a water cooler available for students to refill their water bottles.
How many parent volunteers are required? Is there a maximum?
We do not require a specific number of parent volunteers and there is no maximum for how many adults can join the field trip. The more the merrier!
Do you need to bring indoor shoes?
In the winter, indoor shoes are great to bring. However, do not fret if they are forgotten.
Of course! Simply let us know at time of booking and we will schedule a snack break into the program.
Our blog series "Museum Classroom" is a great resource to discover new programming ideas, activities and more! Whether you are learning in a classroom, the kitchen table or the great outdoors please use the resources found here as you see fit.
In the course of all program activities, photos will be taken and audio and/or visual recordings may be made. We reserve the right to use all photographs and videos of our programs, participants, special events and facilities for promotional purposes. Children's names are not used. Please advise the Instructor of any children whose parents have indicated that they are not have their picture taken.
Contact Us
City Hall
500 George St. N.
Peterborough, ON
K9H 3R9
Phone: 705-742-7777
Toll Free: 1-855-738-3755
Email Us
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