Ancient Greece for Kids | History Learning Video
FUN for kids! Learn all about Ancient Greece in this history learning video for kids! You will discover the 3 main periods of Ancient Greece and some really fascinating facts about this incredible civilization!
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Ancient Greece for Kids | History Learning Video
15 June 2016 at Athens Archeological Museum
the Teachers' Assembly of CITY PLAZA Refugee Guest House
the people with ballons arts group
the last row desks teachers' group
the arts creativity City Plaza group
the Greek “Freinet” teachers group
the Hellenic Theatre/Drama & Education Network (TENet-Gr)
the Solidarity with Refugees Holargos-Papagos Group
at Athens Archeological Museum 15/6/2016
Ancient Greece 101 | National Geographic
From artistry to politics, ancient Greece left a considerable impression on world history. Learn why Greek and Roman gods share so many similarities, how the alphabet got its name, and how the legacy of ancient Greece has evolved over thousands of years.
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Ancient Greece 101 | National Geographic
National Geographic
Holocaust vs Wonderful world - 38th High School of Athens
This is a video created by a 1st grade group of pupils of the 38th Senior High School of Athens who visited Auschwitz - Birkenau ( 25 - 27 April 2018) after being awarded in the film making competition 'The Holocaust and Greek Jews' organised by the Ministry of Education and the Jewish Museum of Greece.
Though it uses photos from a death camp, it’s a film about life in a beautiful world with red roses, a blue sky and friendly people. A world that will be open and tolerant with all, no matter their ethnicity, race, religion, political or other preferences, special abilities or disabilities. A world that will respect universal human rights and values. A world young pupils dream of!
Anastasia, Irini, Niki I am so proud of you!
Educational visit
Representatives of the German Embassy in Athens visit Marathon 1rst Primary School & Marathon Run Museum on 20th February 2009 representing the Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany in a coolaboration among the Marathon Primary School, the Embassy and the Marathon Municipality Administration related to educational goals regarding the course of the German Language as a foreign language within Greek schools
The Tipping Point : Bringing ... the world to Greek classrooms.
..μας ακούτε..;;
The Tipping Point in Education ( in cooperation with teachers across remote regions in Greece bring... the world into the classroom.
Join us in making the schools in remote geographies, the attraction points for the youth, to meet with those who carry best practices and help them stay, work & create at their homelands without having to move to big cities or abroad to meet their mentors.
Teachers & school change-makers:
1. Empower your students to find what they want to be when they grow up
Role models from leading organisations worldwide, doctors, entrepreneurs, craftsmen, interact, even offer job shadowing opportunities, live, to students directly from their working environments and on demand.
2. Enhance your lecture
Bring to class the scientists, engineers, authors, entrepreneurs, and all those who are giving birth to the class material and applying the knowledge on which the lecture is based.
Teachers pair their:
- Physics class with a NASA engineer
- Music class with a jazz virtuoso from a New Orleans quartet
- Chemistry class with a lab researcher in Sydney, Australia
- History class about the Minoan civilization with a museum director in Heraklion, Crete.
A day at school (part II), Greece
A work of pupils from the 14th Gymnasium of Peristeri / Greece
Athens education
Marianna and christina
Afterschool Acropolis visit
On Saturday 18/3/2017 the migrant and refugee families of After School program visited the Acropolis hill and the Acropolis museum.
We would like to thank the administration of Acropolis & Acropolis Museum for the free entrance, our great volunteer tour guides, Αντιγόνη Πογιατζή, Βέρα Αγαπητού, Παναγιώτη Παπαγεωργόπουλο & Αλέξανδρο Τάμογλου Ελευθεριάδη for the unforgettable experience and Kosta Kallergi for the video.
The aim of the After School program is the smooth integration of migrant and refugee children into the Greek school environment and society.
The courses, that “After School” provides, are:
• Supplementary teaching for migrant and refugee children 6-12 years old
• Greek lessons for migrant and refugee children 6-12 years old
• Greek lessons for the parents
• Creative and artistic activities for children (theatre, games, painting, dance)
• Choir class
• Library for children
• Guided tours in museums and art spaces
• English for parents beginners
The program is implemented by the NGO CIVIS PLUS and is supported by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation and the Non-profit Organization Desmos.
NGO CIVIS PLUS
211 01 21 441
project@civisplus.gr
University of Athens - Zografou
A short trip from the bus stop(230) to the School of Philosophy. Filmed using the Canon Powershot A560
Roman Education
Made with
SECRET SCHOOL
This short film (video work) is based on the Greek myth of the secret school and debunks the credibility of excepted historical and social discourses. By engaging with this narrative as the first resource for the artistic process, I revisit specific historical moments and heterotopias from the past and recontextualise them by bringing these into the globalization of the present. Within this carefully constructed, heteroclite space of a concrete bomb shelter, the film awakes the emotional state and uncovers the atmosphere in which the homeless, prohibited populations can find educational, cultural and spiritual shelter. This collective space reveals to the viewers in the form of relational sites. It describes the heterogenic relationship between the library, the educational institution, the museum and the spiritual environment, highlighting their collective elements by bringing all the artifacts together in a nonhierarchical setting and without stylistic distinctions.
Assassin's Creed Odyssey: A Tour of Athens
Take a tour of Ubisoft Quebec's rendition of ancient Athens in Assassin's Creed Odyssey.
Assassin's Creed Odyssey: (Re)Building Athens
Assassin's Creed Odyssey: Introducing Choice and Consequence:
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Greek Art History from Goodbye-Art Academy
Created by Artist Phil Hansen. Text studio to 31996 to get updates from the studio.
Working at the New Acropolis Museum (Greek / English Subtitles)
| We live in Greece. Greece, the country that we love and experience in our daily lives. This is what we want to show to all of you.
Greece, part of our soul!
National Technical University of Athens- School of Architecture
A film by Dimitris Tamvakakis
Food for children elementary schools in Greece
Aristotle's Lyceum
Take a tour round Athens newest oldest site - Aristotle's Lyceum. This beautiful archaeological site was opened to the public in June 2014. Admission is free and the site is currently open from 8 am to 8 pm (summer 2014)
For more videos about Athens visit
Hadrian and Athens: Conversing with an Ideal World
The National Archaeological Museum in collaboration with the Italian Archaeological School at Athens organize the temporary exhibition Hadrian and Athens. Conversing with an Ideal World in the Gallery 31a of the Sculpture Collection. The exhibition marks the 1900 years since the beginning of Adrian's Principate in AD 117, an anniversary that was celebrated in manifold ways by major European museums and cultural institutions. As the Greek Minister of Culture and Sports Ms Lydia Koniordou mentioned during the press conference on Wednesday 22nd of November 2017 at the National Archaeological Museum, the exhibition falls within the wider framework of collaboration between Greece and Italy. The two countries agreed to intensify their cultural and educational relations especially in the area of cultural heritage, as stated in the bilateral meeting of the two Ministers and the signing of the Memorandum of Collaboration.
The exhibition aims to give visitors a unique opportunity to view exhibits which showcase Hadrian's philhellenism and highlight his immense and enduring legacy. By promoting the integration of Greek intelligentsia with Roman tradition, Hadrian contributed decisively to forging a common cultural base that served as a fundamental element of western culture. From this viewpoint, the exhibition marks and heralds the launch of the European Year of Cultural Heritage in 2018. All of the exhibits featured, 40 in all, come from the National Archaeological Museum's collections.
The Athenian Kosmetai gallery in the permanent exhibition of the Sculpture Collection was selected as the ideal setting for the development of the museological concept. Portraits of the Emperor Hadrian are on display centrally in an imaginary philosophical dialogue about Greek culture with emblematic figures of intellectuals such as Metrodorus, Antonius Polemon and Herodes Atticus. Portraits of Plato and Aristoteles, standing as symbols of Greek philosophical thought, observe the imagined conservation, along with the Kosmetai at the back of the hall, i.e. the officials who were responsible for the intellectual and physical education of the ephebes in the Athenian gymnasia of the imperial period. Through this enriched exhibition narrative, the guardians of the traditional education (paideia) of ancient Athens are approached with new interpretative media that highlight the deep spiritual affinity between Hellenic and Roman culture. The world of the Athenian Gymnasia is also enlivened by a series of representative exhibits and the splendid bust of Antinous, the emperor's beloved companion, who was deified after his premature death and venerated in the Gymnasia as a model of youthful beauty and vigour.
The exhibition tour comes to a close with a visit to two more exhibition halls that show complementary aspects of Hadrian's presence in Athens and create a parallel thematic tour to the rest of the museum. In the framework of the Invisible Museum, a highly successful exhibit-event that presents antiquities from the storerooms for a short period, two unique exhibits are on public view for the first time from the 13th of November 2017 until the 4th of March 2018. An inscription bearing the emperor's name accompanied by the title Olympios, is dated about AD 132 and constitutes a testimony to the recognition of Hadrian's beneficence by the Athenian citizens. Next to it stands a second bust of heroized Antinous, found in Patras. The thematic tour ends at the Egyptian Galleries of the National Archaeological Museum, where a statue of Egyptianizing Antinous from the Sanctuary of the Egyptian Gods in Marathon welcomes visitors and narrates in its own way the spiritual quests of the era.