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Discover Toronto Cultural Field Trips

Walking Tour of Downtown Toronto

On this walking tour, students will see and visit major landmarks in downtown Toronto. Some of these attractions include Queen's Park, Yorkville, the University of Toronto, Queen Street, Nathan Phillips Square, Chinatown, Kensington Market, and the Rogers Centre. And of course, the Toronto Eaton Centre - go shopping in Canada's second largest mall!

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The Art Gallery Of Ontario

Founded in 1900 by a group of private citizens as the Art Museum of Toronto, the AGO is one of the largest art museums in North America, with a physical facility of 583,000 square feet.  The AGO expanded its facility in 2008 with an innovative architectural design by world-renowned architect Frank Gehry.  The AGO holds more than 79,000 works in its collection which spans from 100 A.D. to the present.  As one of Canada's most distinguished art museums, the AGO organizes and hosts a wide spectrum of major exhibits.

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The Royal Ontario Museum

Generations of people have trooped through the museum since it opened in 1914. With 6 million objects on display and more than 40 galleries, the collection can't be seen in one day. Favourite exhibits include the wonderful and spooky Bat Cave, the Egyptian mummies and the dinosaur gallery, where 13 skeletons are arranged in realistic simulated settings. Four giant carved totem poles rise in the centre of the stairwells -- the largest is 24.5 metres (80 ft. 6 in.) tall. The Royal Ontario Museum is among the world's leading museums of natural history and of world cultures.

Find out more about the Royal Ontario Museum