Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education
Adult Museum TourSchool Group Museum Tour (Grades 5 - University)
*Please note, there must be 1 chaperone per 10 students. Please fill in the number of people in each category below that will be part of your tour group.
Students (grades 5 - university) Chaperones (parents or teachers for student tours grades 5-university) Adult Senior Adult (65 or older)
Contact Person Name Email Confirm Email School or Group Name Organization Address (include street, town, state, and zip code) Phone Number *please use the phone number that would be best to reach you at the day of the visit
*Student tours take place Mondays-Thursdays, between 9am and 3pm. Tours for groups of 50 people or less are 90 minutes, with an option to extend with a workshop or speaker presentation. Tours for groups of 50 - 100 people are three hours. If you are requesting a tour for more than 100 people, an OJMCHE educator will reach out to discuss a multi-day program.
Preferred date (month / day / year) Back-up date, *must be different from preferred date (month / day / year) Preferred time (Tours are offered between 9am and 3pm.)
OJMCHE has adopted a sliding scale admission model. Please select the admission rate that best meets your group’s needs.
Pay It Forward - $10 per person (this covers your admission and admission for a group that needs a scholarship)Standard Group Rate Admission - $5 per personPartial Scholarship - $2 per person (available for school groups only)Full Scholarship - All Title 1 schools and schools that have 40% or more of students receiving free or reduced lunch automatically receive full scholarship (available for school groups only)
Some schools may be eligible to be reimbursed for bussing costs. Please indicate if you are interested in learning more about bussing scholarships. yesno
Is this your first time visiting the museum? yesno
If this is not your first trip to the museum, please provide us with any additional information about your previous experience that would be helpful for us to know.
OJMCHE is committed to being a welcoming and inclusive space. To help us best meet your group’s physical, emotional, and/or learning needs, please share some information about your group’s literacy levels, languages spoken (other than English), sensory needs, or attention span, and we will do our best to adapt to these needs.
Please select the best description of your groups’ experience with Holocaust studies: Beginning - No prior information. This program will be an introduction for students.Basic - Audience has learned basic historical information like dates and introductory vocabulary.Moderate - Audience is familiar with historical information and vocabulary and are beginning to think about complex questions associated with Holocaust history.Advanced - Audience is fluent in historical details and is capable of conversing on the complexity of Holocaust history. Audience can connect Holocaust history to other non-Holocaust issues.
We like to hear how this museum visit builds connections with work you're already doing. Please list specific projects, lessons, or conversations your group has been or will be working on that correlate with this visit. Please note any Holocaust-related media your group has experience with (books, movies, etc.).
What would you like your group to take away from this experience?
Our standard hour and a half program includes a welcome and tour of our exhibitions. Depending on your learning goals and group size, a tour will cover anywhere from one to three exhibitions. To best assist us in determining which exhibitions best meet the needs of your group, please rank the exhibitions in order of importance to your visit, with number 1 being your top choice and 4 being your last choice. A description of each exhibition below can be found on this page for core exhibitions, and this page for temporary exhibitions.
Discrimination and Resistance The Holocaust Oregon Jewish Stories Temporary Exhibition currently on view
Is there anything else you would like your tour guide to know?
School groups can add a workshop or speaker to their visit. Please note that this will increase the length of your program by an hour and a half. Time for a snack or lunch break will be included in the program.
Based on the Holocaust memorial Places of Remembrance in Germany, participants create a timeline of voices by reading over 90 antisemitic laws passed between 1933-1945. Discuss how Adolf Hitler became a totalitarian leader of once-democratic Germany and the legislative processes that allowed for discrimination to result in genocide. This is recommended for introduction or if you are just starting to study the Holocaust in class. Law and Disorder: Legalizing Discrimination during the Holocaust Explore how the photographs of Henryk Ross represent the complexity of life in the Lodz Ghetto, and the role of the photographer as witness, resister, and accomplice. Life in the Lodz Ghetto: Photographs by Henryk Ross Through interactive activities, participants analyze and contextualize patterns of human behavior, specifically those of resisters and rescuers during the Holocaust. They will also identify which tools of resistance resonate with them. Rescue and Resistance during the Holocaust By examining primary source propaganda materials across a spectrum of historical examples, participants will consider how stereotypes influence the way we view and treat others, as well as how stereotyping and scapegoating escalate to acts of discrimination, prejudice, and violence. Analyzing Stereotypes and Scapegoating Request a presentation by a member of our Speakers’ Bureau. Speaker
The Museum periodically takes pictures of group visits and special events, including classes and workshops in session. These are used in publications to promote the museum. We assume your child’s presence at the museum constitutes parental permission to use pictures of their image in this context unless otherwise noted. Photography Release Contracts can be made available for parents upon request. I understand the Oregon Jewish Museum's photo release policy, and agree to its terms and conditions.I understand the Oregon Jewish Museum's photo release policy, and do not allow photographs to be taken.This policy does not apply to the age range of my group.
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