#OnThisDay Dec. 4 – 10, 2020

Dec. 3, 2020 – Discovery Park of America is filled with artifacts, replicas, history, science, art and more. Our mission is to inspire children and adults to see beyond, and we do so by sharing educational content online and throughout our museum.

We share weekly updates on anniversaries and significant moments in history, and where you can find items related to these dates through our museum and heritage park.

Natural History Gallery (Mineral Wall)

  • Dec. 5, 1848 (172nd anniversary) – United States President James K. Polk triggered the Gold Rush of 1849 by confirming a gold discovery in California.

Technology Showcase

  • Dec. 6, 1877 (143rd anniversary) – Thomas Edison made the first sound recording. He recorded himself reciting “Mary had a Little Lamb.” From this machine evolved the phonographs and record industries of the world.
  • Dec. 6, 1923 (97th anniversary) – Calvin Coolidge gave the first presidential address broadcast on radio.

Military Gallery (Reconstruction)

  • Dec. 5, 1955 (65th anniversary) – Following the arrest of civil rights activist Rosa Parks, the Montgomery Improvement Association was formed to direct the boycott of the city’s segregated buses. Martin Luther King, Jr. was elected as the organization’s president.
  • Dec. 6, 1865 (155th anniversary) – The 13th Amendment formally abolished slavery in the United States.
  • Dec. 10, 1964 (56th anniversary) – Martin Luther King Jr. received the Nobel Peace Prize for his nonviolent resistance to racial prejudice in America. He declared that “every penny” of the $54,000 award would be used in the ongoing civil rights struggle.

Military Gallery (World War II)

  • Dec. 7, 1941 (79th anniversary) – The Japanese attacked the United States Navy at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii.
  • Dec. 8, 1941 (79th anniversary) – After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the United States officially entered World War II.

Caterpillar Model Fifteen 2020

Caterpillar Model Fifteen

Nov. 30, 2020 – On Dec. 5, 2020, Discovery Park of America’s newest permanent exhibit, AgriCulture: Innovating for Our Survival, will open to the general public. This eye-opening display will give guests of all ages a better understanding of how food, fuel and fiber get from the farm to consumers and the significance scientific innovation plays in the modern agricultural industry.

While the exhibit will shed light on the latest and greatest in agricultural technology, it will also illuminate the lesser-known history of farm machinery over the last 150 years. This will be accomplished through the inclusion of several machines that have been on display at Discovery Park since its inception as well as a few newcomers – most notably a 1927 Caterpillar Model Fifteen, one of a series of tractors that redefined the American farm.

In 1907, Benjamin Holt, a wheel maker in Stockton, Calif., noted that the soft alluvial soils surrounding the San Joaquin River in California’s Central Valley were often impassible by heavy steam-powered tractors, which sank deep into the ground or became stuck on rolling terrain. Mimicking a technique that he had witnessed in England four years prior, Holt developed a tractor with a system of endless steel platforms, which we now recognize as continuous track, which allowed the weight of the tractor to be distributed across a larger area, causing the machine to float across the surface much like a snowshoe on unconsolidated snow. This design also prevented the tractor from compacting the soil too tightly, which was detrimental to row crops. A photographer hired to document the prototype noted that the machine crawled across the earth like a caterpillar – and thus, the brand was born.

In 1910, Holt purchased the defunct Colean Manufacturing Company facility in Peoria, Ill., a city that would host Caterpillar Inc.’s headquarters until 2017. Holt’s nephew, Pliny Holt, managed the facility in its infancy. After the outbreak of World War I, Holt Manufacturing Company shifted all of its focus away from agricultural equipment to facilitate the production of military equipment, including artillery tractors equipped with continuous track, which many historians have credited as an essential advancement on the Allies’ path to victory in 1918. During the war, C.L. Best Tractor Company, a competitor that Holt had frequently encountered in courtrooms over the previous decade over trademark infringement, took the lead in domestic farm equipment sales. Nevertheless, both companies took massive losses in the recession of 1920-21. In 1925, after 20 years of rivalry and at the urging of investors, Holt Manufacturing Company and C.L. Best Tractor Company merged to form Caterpillar Tractor Co.

The two companies consolidated their product lines to offer only five “crawler” type tractors, including the new company’s first original line – the Caterpillar Model Fifteen. Weighing in at 4,500lbs, the relatively compact and lightweight Model Fifteen was equipped with a four-cylinder gasoline engine employing three forward gears and one reverse.

With the assistance of Robert Weunch, Discovery Park of America acquired the 1927 Model Fifteen in a dilapidated state in 2014 from Robert Lavoie. Union City natives and brothers David and Jeff Ursery began working to restore the piece to its original functionality and charm. The Ursery brothers began by disassembling the tractor to bare parts and determining which parts were salvageable and which would need to be completely rebuilt. Some of the irreparable pieces were milled at local tool and dye shops, while others are parts from newer tractors that have been modified to function on the Model Fifteen. Enough of the original paint remained to formulate a new coat, and faded emblems were deciphered by examining vintage photos and diagrams of tractors from the same production line.

On Nov. 10, 2020, the tractor was delivered to its new permanent location in the Simmons Bank Ag Center by Buddy’s Wrecker Service, where it will inspire children and adults to see beyond their understanding of the American farm for years to come.

#OnThisDay Nov. 20 – 26, 2020

Nov. 19, 2020 – Discovery Park of America is filled with artifacts, replicas, history, science, art and more. Our mission is to inspire children and adults to see beyond, and we do so by sharing educational content online and throughout our museum.

We share weekly updates on anniversaries and significant moments in history, and where you can find items related to these dates through our museum and heritage park.

Regional History Gallery

  • Nov. 20, 1936 (84th anniversary) – “Slingshot” Charlie Taylor, an Obion County native who was famous for his prowess with the slingshot, received his hunting and fishing license for just $2.00.

Science, Space and Technology Gallery

  • Nov. 21, 1877 (143rd anniversary) – Thomas Edison announced his great invention—the phonograph—while working on a way to record telephone communication at his laboratory.
  • Nov. 23, 1924 (96th anniversary) – Edwin Hubble’s discovery of nebulae beyond the Milky Way galaxy was published in the New York Times.
  • Nov. 23, 1936 (84th anniversary) – The first issue of the pictorial magazine Life was published.

Natural History Gallery

  • Nov. 24, 1859 (161st anniversary) – Charles Darwin’s Origin of Species that explores evolution and natural selection was published. It immediately sold out its initial print run and became one of the most influential books of modern time.

Children’s Exploration Gallery (Entry Level)

  • Nov. 26, 1945 (75th anniversary) – The popular slinky toy was displayed at Gimbels Department Store in Philadelphia. The whole inventory of 400 was sold within 90 minutes.

National/International Holiday

  • Nov. 26, 1941 (79th anniversary) – President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a bill officially establishing the fourth Thursday in November as Thanksgiving Day.

#OnThisDay Nov. 13-19, 2020

Nov. 12, 2020 – Discovery Park of America is filled with artifacts, replicas, history, science, art and more. Our mission is to inspire children and adults to see beyond, and we do so by sharing educational content online and throughout our museum.

We share weekly updates on anniversaries and significant moments in history, and where you can find items related to these dates through our museum and heritage park.

STEM Landing

  • Nov. 13, 1980 (40th anniversary) – The United States Spacecraft Voyager 1 sent back the first close up picture of Saturn.
  • Nov. 14, 1965 (55th anniversary)U.S. Bell UH-1B “Huey” Helicopters, like the one on display at STEM Landing, delivered lead units to Landing Zone X-Ray in South Vietnam’s Ia Drang Valley. The North Vietnamese Army attacked, triggering the first major battle between U.S. and North Vietnamese armies during the Vietnam War.
  • Nov. 14, 1969 (51st anniversary) – Apollo 12, the second manned mission to the surface of the moon, launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida. President Richard Nixon viewed the liftoff from Pad A at Cape Canaveral making him the first president to attend the liftoff of a manned space flight.

Freedom Square: Liberty Hall

  • Nov. 15, 1777 (243rd anniversary) – The Continental Congress adopted the Articles of Confederation, the first constitution of the United States, on Nov. 15, 1777.

Science, Space and Technology Gallery

  • Nov. 16, 2011 (9th anniversary)The Gutenberg Press on display in the technology showcase is a full scale, fully functional reproduction. It was built by Pratt Wagon and Press Works, of Cove Fort, Utah, and delivered to Discovery Park on Nov. 16, 2011, almost two full years before the park opened to the public.

Train Depot

  • Nov. 18, 1883 (137th anniversary) – At exactly noon on this day, American and Canadian railroads created the first time zones. They began using four continental time zones to end the confusion of dealing with thousands of local times.

Freedom Square: Walk of Heroes

  • Nov. 19, 1863 (157th anniversary)President Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address at the dedication of the National Cemetery at the site of the Battle of Gettysburg.

National/International Holidays

  • Nov. 15, 2020 – National Recycling Day

 

#OnThisDay Nov. 6 – 12, 2020

Nov. 5, 2020 – Discovery Park of America is filled with artifacts, replicas, history, science, art and more. Our mission is to inspire children and adults to see beyond, and we do so by sharing educational content online and throughout our museum.

We share weekly updates on anniversaries and significant moments in history, and where you can find items related to these dates through our museum and heritage park.

Freedom Square

  • Nov. 6, 1860 (160th anniversary)Abraham Lincoln was elected the 16th President of the United States over a deeply divided democratic party, becoming the first republican to win the presidency.
  • Nov. 11, 1620 (400th anniversary) – Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower completed their 66-day journey from England to Cape Cod. Forty-one men on board the ship signed the Mayflower Compact, a set of rules for self-governance.

Military Gallery

  • Nov. 7, 1861 (159th anniversary) – Union forces under the command of Ulysses S. Grant overran a Confederate camp at the Battle of Belmont in Missouri during the Civil War.
  • Nov. 10, 1775 (245th anniversary) – During the American Revolution, the Continental Congress passed a resolution stating that “two Battalions of Marines be raised.” The resolution created the Continental Marines and is now observed as the birth date of the United States Marine Corps.
  • Nov. 11, 1918 (102nd anniversary) – Armistice Day: World War I ended when Germany signed an armistice agreement with the Allies in a railroad car outside Compiégne, France.

Train Depot

  • Nov. 7, 1885 (135th anniversary) – Canada’s first transcontinental railway, the Canadian Pacific, was completed in British Columbia.

National/International Day

  • Nov. 8, 2020 – STEM/STEAM Day: This day recognizes the strong science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics skills being taught in education programs around the world.
  • Nov. 11, 2020 – Veteran’s Day: On this day, we honor the brave men and women who have fought and are fighting in the United States armed forces.

At Home Activity: Pizza Box Solar Oven 2020

At Home Activity: Pizza Box Solar Oven

Experiment time!

Oct. 29, 2020 – Did you know you could make an oven out of just a few household items and an old pizza box? The McIver’s Grant Public Library in Dyersburg, Tenn., shared this interactive science project with us to share with you! This fun activity teaches you how engineers harness the power of solar energy and convert energy from the sun into conductive heat. You’ll need the following items:

  • Small cardboard box with a lid, such as a pizza box
  • Tin foil
  • Plastic Wrap
  • Sunlight
  • Pencil/stick or wood skewer
  • Optional: Graham crackers, chocolate and marshmallows

This experiment works best outdoors on a bright, sunny day.

Instructions: 

Step 1) Take an empty pizza box and cover the base and lid with tin foil all the way around – depending on your pizza box and your foil, you may need tape to securely fasten the foil. Be careful to make as few wrinkles as possible. This will reflect the solar radiation into the box so the more concentrated the light, the better.

Step 2) Cover the opening of the box with plastic wrap; this will help keep the heat inside your solar box. Make sure that it is completely sealed.

Step 3) Use a pencil, stick or skewer to play with the position of the pizza box lid. You want to be using the lid to direct more sun rays directly into the pizza box.

Once you have completed steps 1-3, place your box outside on a concrete surface like your driveway or sidewalk. Be sure to align the box with the sun so that there’s no shadow inside your solar oven.

For a sweet treat, place a graham cracker with a marshmallow inside the box and reposition the lid to catch those sun rays. Let that cook for approximately 30 minutes and place a piece of chocolate on top of the marshmallow. Reposition the lid for 5 more minutes of sunlight. Finally, carefully remove the treat from the box and enjoy a delicious s’mores!

#OnThisDay: Oct. 30 – Nov. 5, 2020

Oct. 29, 2020 – Discovery Park of America is filled with artifacts, replicas, history, science, art and more. Our mission is to inspire children and adults to see beyond, and we do so by sharing educational content online and throughout our museum.

We share weekly updates on anniversaries and significant moments in history, and where you can find items related to these dates through our museum and heritage park.

Military Gallery

  • Oct. 30, 1942 (78th anniversary) – British soldiers salvage important papers and equipment from an enemy U-boat off the Egyptian coast during World War II. The recovered documents provided the vital clue required to crack the Enigma code system used by the German military.
  • Nov. 1, 1940 (80th anniversary) – German U-Boat 37mm Deck Gun: The Unterseeboot U-166 is launch during World War II.
  • Nov. 1, 1955 (65th anniversary) – This is the date that the U.S. government considers the start of the Vietnam War. It was on this day that the Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) was reorganized into country specific units, and MAAG-Vietnam was established.

STEM Landing

  • Nov. 2, 2000 (20th anniversary) – The first residential crew arrives aboard the International Space Station.

Science, Space and Technology Gallery

  • Oct. 30, 1938 (82nd anniversary) – Vintage Radios: “The War of the Worlds”—Orson Welles’s realistic radio dramatization of a Martian invasion of Earth—is broadcast on the radio.

Freedom Square

  • Nov. 4, 1842 (178th anniversary) – Abraham Lincoln marries Mary Todd at her sister’s home in Springfield, Illinois.

Energy Gallery

  • Nov. 4, 1745 (275 anniversary) – Energy Leyden Jars: German experimenter Ewald G. von Kleist accidentally discovers the Leyden jar. It is the first device capable of storing an electric charge.

Discovery Park of America

  • Nov. 1, 2013 (7th anniversary) – Robert and Jenny Kirkland cut the red ribbon for the grand opening of Discovery Park of America.

#OnThisDay: Oct. 23 – 29, 2020

#OnThisDay: Oct. 23 – Oct. 29, 2020

Oct. 22, 2020 – Discovery Park of America is filled with artifacts, replicas, history, science, art and more. Our mission is to inspire children and adults to see beyond, and we do so by sharing educational content online and throughout our museum.

We share weekly updates on anniversaries and significant moments in history, and where you can find items related to these dates through our museum and heritage park.

STEM Landing

  • Oct. 25, 1671 (349th anniversary) – Giovanni Cassini discovered Lapetus, a satellite of Saturn.
  • Oct. 29, 1998 (22nd anniversary) – Senator John Glenn, Jr., returned to space as a payload specialist aboard the space shuttle Discovery. At 77 years of age, Glenn was the oldest human ever to travel in space.

The Settlement

  • Oct. 27, 1873 (147th anniversary) – This is the anniversary of Susan Godsey’s death. Her story is told in the Sleeping Beauty Cabin at Discovery Park.

Women’s Suffrage Exhibit

  • Oct. 23, 1850 (170th anniversary) – The first National Women’s Rights Convention was held on this day.

Military Gallery

  • Oct. 25, 1940 (80th anniversary) – Benjamin O. Davis became the first African America General in the U.S. Army during World War II.

International/National History

  • Oct. 24, 1945 (75th anniversary) – The United Nations was founded on this day.
  • Oct. 28, 1886 (134th anniversary) – President Grover Cleveland dedicated the Statue of Liberty.

#OnThisDay: Oct. 15 – 22, 2020

#OnThisDay: Oct. 15 – Oct. 22, 2020

Oct. 15, 2020 – Discovery Park of America is filled with artifacts, replicas, history, science, art and more. Our mission is to inspire children and adults to see beyond, and we do so by sharing educational content online and throughout our museum.

We share weekly updates on anniversaries and significant moments in history, and where you can find items related to these dates through our museum and heritage park.

Liberty Hall

  • Oct. 15, 1781 (239th anniversary) – Hopelessly trapped at Yorktown, Virginia, British General Lord Cornwallis surrendered 8,000 British soldiers and seamen to a larger Franco-American force, effectively bringing an end to the American Revolution.

Native Americans Gallery

  • Oct. 19, 1938 (82nd anniversary) – This is the birthday of Brent Wade who owned roughly 3,000 of the Native American artifacts at Discovery Park.

Freedom Square: Walk of Heroes

  • Oct. 20, 1803 (217th anniversary) – While Thomas Jefferson was serving his first presidential term, the Louisiana Purchase was completed and doubled the size of the United States.

Military Gallery

  • Oct. 21, 1856 (164th anniversary) – The patent was issued to Jean Alexandre LeMat of New Orleans for the LeMat Revolver. The Confederate Army mostly used this revolver.

Science, Space and Technology Gallery

  • Oct. 22, 1987 (33rd anniversary) – A Gutenberg Bible Old Testament was purchased by a Japanese buyer at Christie’s Auction House for $5.4 million, a record at auction for a printed book.

International/National Holidays

  • Oct. 21, 2020 – National Reptile Awareness Day

Exciting Stories of Innovation will be told in the New Agriculture Exhibit 2020

Exciting Stories of Innovation will be told in the New Agriculture Exhibit

Sept. 25, 2020 – Discovery Park of America is excited to share a glimpse of the new agriculture exhibit, “AgriCulture: Innovating for Our Survival,” that will open Dec. 5, 2020. This mind-blowing, myth-busting exhibit will help visitors of all ages gain a better understanding of how food, fuel and fiber get from the farm to the family and the role technological, scientific and genetic innovation in agriculture plays in society and culture around the world.

This exhibit will feature farming innovation in the past, present—and especially—future in a fun and interactive way. Stories of individuals who are leaders in the field of agriculture will also be shared.

NASCAR Driver Ross Chastain

Eighth-generation watermelon farmer and professional NASCAR driver Ross Chastain, the busiest driver in NASCAR, uses much of his time in the spotlight to educate the public about the important role of agriculture today. Nicknamed the “Melon Man,” he’s known for smashing a watermelon to the ground in the Victory Lane when he celebrates race wins. Chastain drives for Kaulig Racing in the No. 10 Nutrien Ag Solutions Chevrolet Camaro in the Xfinity Series. He’s featured in the Nutrien Ag Solutions – and NASCAR-produced docuseries Two-Track Mind, which follows Chastain as he races around the country and visits farms along the way, educating a broader audience about modern production agriculture.

Dr. Nadia Shakoor

Dr. Nadia Shakoor is a senior research scientist at The Donald Danforth Plant Science Center in St. Louis and recently received a grant from The National Institute for Food and Agriculture and the National Science Foundation to develop FieldDock, an integrated smart farm system. The technology Shakoor and her collaborators are developing will collect and analyze real time data from fields, allowing for effective tracking of crop performance.

Daniel Masaba

Daniel Masaba from Uganda started a poultry farm with no experience, very limited resources and no prior education on farming. On his YouTube channel, he offers free information about poultry farming “to inspire more young people to step out and start.”

He’s just one of the many farmers using social media to inform and educate the public about agriculture today.

Alexander Olesen and Graham Smith

Babylon Micro-Farms invented a vertical farming platform that uses AI, machine learning and camera vision, enabling anyone to grow fresh, nutritious produce on-site using patented technology combined with a mobile app that controls the operation of the farms. The company was co-founded in 2017 by University of Virginia students Alexander Olesen and Graham Smith after an undergraduate student project to develop low-cost micro-farms for refugee communities. Babylon is now installing vertical farms at schools, senior living communities, hotels and resorts.

Derek and Micayla Giffin

The Giffins grow row crops on the same fields that Derek’s family has farmed for more than 100 years. The couple created a more sustainable operation by adding cattle to Giffin Farms. While the Giffins’ cattle graze on grass, they are finished with grain and ready to be harvested an average of 14 months sooner than cattle fed only on grass. This reduces the land, water and energy required to produce a pound of healthy protein by 50%.

Stephen Penick

Stephen Penick is an occupational therapist, beekeeper and owner of Star Pastures Apiary, a farm that specializes in raising and selling honeybees and harvesting their honey, in Martin, Tennessee. The farm currently has 80 bee hives located around northwest Tennessee. They are used for pollination, honey production, and even research for the study of pollen collection from various plant varieties at Bethel University.

Jimmy Tosh

With nearly 400 full-time employees, Tosh Farms in Henry, Tennessee, is the state’s largest pork producer and the nation’s 28th largest pork producer. The family-owned business cares for 37,000 sows at 11 sites and produces 850,000 hogs annually. Innovation at Tosh Farms includes a state-of-the-art research barn testing new diets and animal health technology for their pigs. To make their operation sustainable, the company uses row crops grown on the farm’s 12,000 acres to produce pelleted feed rations for their pigs—5,500 tons of feed weekly.

Sarah Bellos

Sarah Bellos is the CEO and founder of Stony Creek Colors. After she discovered that a large-scale source for natural dyes for clothing didn’t exist,  Bellos knew she had to find a solution. She worked with farmers, chemists, mills and brands to create a new and profitable way to manufacture bio-based dyes. Today, Stony Creek Colors supplies natural indigo dye for denim clothing for Wrangler, Patagonia, Lucky Brands, J. Crew and others.

Major sponsors of this exhibit are Nutrien Ag Solutions and Simmons Bank.

For current list of partners, contributors, friends and Champions of Agriculture, click here.

The floorplan for “AgriCulture: Innovating for Our Survival” features different sections that tell the story of farming innovation in the past, present—and especially—future in a fun and interactive way.

Explore this computerized rendering of the look and feel of this exciting new exhibit and get a taste of what Discovery Park’s guests will experience as they explore innovation in agriculture. Watch the walkthrough.

New Chapel of Discovery Park of America 2020

New Chapel of Discovery Park of America

Post by Rob Finley, docent at Discovery Park of America

Sept. 3, 2020 – Discovery Park of America invites you to come and enjoy the historic church structure located at our facilities. New Chapel of Discovery Park of America, originally of Elbridge, Tennessee, reflects a two hundred year old congregation. Founded as a combination school and church in the early years of the 19th Century, Davidson’s Chapel, as it was originally known, had a dirt floor with split log benches.  Like many churches in west Tennessee and west Kentucky, the congregation was dramatically impacted by the Second Great Awakening (1790 to 1800) and the Kentucky Cane Ridge Camp Revival (near Lexington, Kentucky) of 1801 as the flames of revival spread westward over the next 60 years.

In 1900 congregations from Elbridge, Zion, Cunningham, and Minnich combined to form the New Chapel United Methodist Church. The congregation sought to be faithful to the teachings of John Wesley and the Early Methodists with their emphasis upon sincere conversion of unbelievers, scriptural convictions through the Methodist Book of Disciplines, and spiritual compassion concerning the ever challenging issues such as alcohol temperance, abolition of slavery, education and prison reforms, women’s rights, and children’s orphanages.

The church building that you see at Discovery Park of America was built in 1852. It is the third authentic building for this congregation. During the growth years around the onset of the 20th Century, the congregation reached 277 members, but with wars, diseases, and upward mobility, the congregation dwindled down to ten active members by 2013. It was then, that the members decided to preserve their heritage and the building by donating the structure to Discovery Park of America. The building was dismantled and reconstructed at the park.

This attractive house of worship is matched only by the faithfulness of its leaders and members whose names are embossed upon the stain glass windows and in the book of historic records that are on display. As you enter the sanctuary, take in the beautiful woodwork, the curved kneeling rails, the commanding podium, and the stain glass windows. Pause long enough to breathe in the history of the church. Imagine the awe-inspiring worship services with strong preaching, fervent praying, and exalted singing. Allow the hallowed structure to challenge and renew your faith. Then, with respect, express your thankfulness to the congregation for having the vision to preserve this building!

Today, Discovery Park of America seeks to breathe new life into The New Chapel Methodist Church by utilizing its facilities for weddings and worship services. We encourage you to consult with our events director for arrangements.

Q & A with Nathaniel Newlin on Online Educational Opportunities 2020

Sept. 1, 2020 – As schools begin to reopen, and as many students experience virtual learning or homeschooling for the first time, we wanted to sit down with our experts in the Education Department and see how Discovery Park of America is helping students, teachers and parents during the era of online education. Nathaniel Newlin, Assistant Education Director, gives us the inside scoop on the free online resources that are available for students and teachers.

Question: How is Discovery Park of America helping teachers and students during the era of online learning?

We are excited to announce that beginning in September 2020, Discovery Park’s education team will be offering virtual field trip options for classes, homeschool groups and even families. These programs will include a roughly 20-minute video call with an education specialist on our team, as well as activities for before and after the lesson. We are also collaborating with the University of Tennessee at Martin to offer weekly virtual learning opportunities with professors that are passionate about their academic specialties.

Question: Are the available resources following state standards?

Yes. All curricula offered through our virtual and on-site field trip programs are designed to address Tennessee state academic standards for their targeted ages and grades. Even the virtual opportunities available through the Discovery Park – UT Martin partnership will be grounded in Tennessee state standards.

Question: What programs are you offering for online learning?

Our virtual opportunities will include practically all subjects that are available through our on-site Field Trip Catalog. These options are as encyclopedic as Discovery Park of America itself, and cover broad sectors of science, technology, history, art and philosophy. The online discussions with professors will cover equally eclectic material, as we will be working with faculty across multiple departments at UT Martin.

Question: Where can teachers and parents find the online resources?

All virtual resources offered by Discovery Park of America will be accessible on our website, under the Education tab. Materials offered in partnership with UT Martin will also be shared on our Facebook page and YouTube channel. Questions or requests for additional materials may be submitted to education@discoveryparkofamerica.com.

Question: What about homeschool days? What will those look like this year?

At this time, Discovery Park’s monthly Homeschool Day program will continue as scheduled. We are, of course, requiring all educators and students to wear masks and social distance. Class size is being restricted, and all lessons will be held in the largest rooms available at the park to make social distancing as natural and comfortable as possible for our students.  Every effort is being made by our team to assure that these precautions do not diminish the quality of curriculum or the students’ experience.

Question: Is there an opportunity to give to Discovery Park and help with these programs? 

Yes! You can donate through our website, discoveryparkofamerica.com, or by calling 731-885-5455. Our patrons’ donations ensure that our programs will continue to inspire children and adults to see beyond, even during a pandemic. We are grateful for all of the generous donors who have made our resources available to hundreds of thousands of children over the last 7 years, and we look forward to ringing in a new era as we expand these opportunities to encompass anyone and everyone who can access our online content.