You ask yourself: How can you combine playing and learning? How do you learn something new particularly quickly and keep it in your head? Preferably so that learning is fun and happens almost completely by itself.
Interactive museums use the concept of learning through play, which children naturally use to understand the world. Children reenact situations and scenarios from movies or everyday life. Acquiring knowledge through fun and putting yourself in a strange situation helps you to understand and remember something better.
Interactive museums use the concept of learning through play to convey content quickly and more consistently. For example, exchange ideas about the everyday life of people in the GDR, recreate an experiment yourself or play on an old console. This not only gives you a great experience, but the transfer of knowledge through the museum happens almost by itself.
The world's first computer games museum was opened in Berlin in 1997 and has a permanent exhibition on digital interactive entertainment culture. Over 300 exhibits on the history of computer games await visitors to play, experiment and learn. Admire the original data carriers with computer games and applications, consoles and computer systems, magazines, vending machine systems, literature, media art objects, archival materials, merchandising articles and video materials.
The Computer Games Museum's exhibitions are made possible by the Förderverein für Jugend und Sozialarbeit (fjs e.V.), which has been committed to collecting and preserving digital interactive culture for more than 21 years and making it accessible to an audience of millions. Computer games are an important part of our culture shaped by digital technologies. The Computer Games Museum is actively committed to communicating the culture and history of digital games to a wide audience through exhibitions, media education offerings, events and publications. The aim is to deepen the understanding of digital interactive entertainment media and thus increase media literacy.
Here you can experience 2000 years of German history in 12 historical periods in a single visit. You've never seen a museum like this before: You'll find life-size, detailed worlds to immerse yourself in. Using modern technology, a 4D museum was created here. Vast views, ambient sounds and even smells bring the historic places to life. Here you'll learn how people lived back then by physically swapping into their world. Start in antiquity, where Germanic tribes join forces against the Romans, touch models of the first book printing and witness the construction of the wall. The unique combination of education and amusement park, innovation and history make up the Deutschlandmuseum.
Where the Berlin Wall divided the city until 1989, the museum provides a unique insight into the shadowy realm of espionage. Visitors are provided with the latest technologies to uncover the sophisticated and sometimes bizarre methods used by agents and secret services in a multimedia and interactive way. Germany's only spy museum offers a thrilling journey through time from biblical scouts to the present and future in the middle of the spy capital. Decipher secret codes, pass the laser course, get your “secure” password cracked and hack your favorite website!
Here, visitors get up close and personal with the everyday life of a bygone state. In doing so, history is brought to life and yet scientifically based. Authentic originals and globally unique interactive installations await you, which you can touch and try out. How about sitting in a Trabi driving simulator, in an original Trabant P 601. You can also look at a faithfully furnished prefabricated apartment with five rooms to immerse yourself in people's everyday lives. In addition, there are numerous interactive games for young and old, the monumental mural “Praise of Communism” and the opportunity to touch many of the exhibits.
Here, visitors will find many exciting and interactive exhibitions. For example, do a workshop about scooping paper and learn about the materials you need, but also how to use resources sustainably and why that is important. Or would you rather recreate experiments on electricity and optics in the “Milestones School Lab” and experiment yourself? The interactive range of workshops and guided tours with special educational offerings for school groups is very diverse. Take a guided tour on aviation, communications technology or sugar, for example.
It couldn't be more interactive; in the digital scavenger hunt “Spy and Escape at the Berlin Wall,” you help an art dealer flee from East to West Berlin. The story is based on true events and takes you along the wall strip to the Berlin Wall Memorial with exciting puzzles, quizzes and valuable knowledge about the GDR. Here, children and young people learn more about the history of divided Berlin in a playful way and can navigate their way through SchoolRallye's puzzle tour using a mix of movement, puzzling and teamwork.
Book your appointment for the School Rally “Flight and Espionage at the Berlin Wall” here!
You ask yourself: How can you combine playing and learning? How do you learn something new particularly quickly and keep it in your head? Preferably so that learning is fun and happens almost completely by itself.
Interactive museums use the concept of learning through play, which children naturally use to understand the world. Children reenact situations and scenarios from movies or everyday life. Acquiring knowledge through fun and putting yourself in a strange situation helps you to understand and remember something better.
Interactive museums use the concept of learning through play to convey content quickly and more consistently. For example, exchange ideas about the everyday life of people in the GDR, recreate an experiment yourself or play on an old console. This not only gives you a great experience, but the transfer of knowledge through the museum happens almost by itself.
The world's first computer games museum was opened in Berlin in 1997 and has a permanent exhibition on digital interactive entertainment culture. Over 300 exhibits on the history of computer games await visitors to play, experiment and learn. Admire the original data carriers with computer games and applications, consoles and computer systems, magazines, vending machine systems, literature, media art objects, archival materials, merchandising articles and video materials.
The Computer Games Museum's exhibitions are made possible by the Förderverein für Jugend und Sozialarbeit (fjs e.V.), which has been committed to collecting and preserving digital interactive culture for more than 21 years and making it accessible to an audience of millions. Computer games are an important part of our culture shaped by digital technologies. The Computer Games Museum is actively committed to communicating the culture and history of digital games to a wide audience through exhibitions, media education offerings, events and publications. The aim is to deepen the understanding of digital interactive entertainment media and thus increase media literacy.
Here you can experience 2000 years of German history in 12 historical periods in a single visit. You've never seen a museum like this before: You'll find life-size, detailed worlds to immerse yourself in. Using modern technology, a 4D museum was created here. Vast views, ambient sounds and even smells bring the historic places to life. Here you'll learn how people lived back then by physically swapping into their world. Start in antiquity, where Germanic tribes join forces against the Romans, touch models of the first book printing and witness the construction of the wall. The unique combination of education and amusement park, innovation and history make up the Deutschlandmuseum.
Where the Berlin Wall divided the city until 1989, the museum provides a unique insight into the shadowy realm of espionage. Visitors are provided with the latest technologies to uncover the sophisticated and sometimes bizarre methods used by agents and secret services in a multimedia and interactive way. Germany's only spy museum offers a thrilling journey through time from biblical scouts to the present and future in the middle of the spy capital. Decipher secret codes, pass the laser course, get your “secure” password cracked and hack your favorite website!
Here, visitors get up close and personal with the everyday life of a bygone state. In doing so, history is brought to life and yet scientifically based. Authentic originals and globally unique interactive installations await you, which you can touch and try out. How about sitting in a Trabi driving simulator, in an original Trabant P 601. You can also look at a faithfully furnished prefabricated apartment with five rooms to immerse yourself in people's everyday lives. In addition, there are numerous interactive games for young and old, the monumental mural “Praise of Communism” and the opportunity to touch many of the exhibits.
Here, visitors will find many exciting and interactive exhibitions. For example, do a workshop about scooping paper and learn about the materials you need, but also how to use resources sustainably and why that is important. Or would you rather recreate experiments on electricity and optics in the “Milestones School Lab” and experiment yourself? The interactive range of workshops and guided tours with special educational offerings for school groups is very diverse. Take a guided tour on aviation, communications technology or sugar, for example.
It couldn't be more interactive; in the digital scavenger hunt “Spy and Escape at the Berlin Wall,” you help an art dealer flee from East to West Berlin. The story is based on true events and takes you along the wall strip to the Berlin Wall Memorial with exciting puzzles, quizzes and valuable knowledge about the GDR. Here, children and young people learn more about the history of divided Berlin in a playful way and can navigate their way through SchoolRallye's puzzle tour using a mix of movement, puzzling and teamwork.
Book your appointment for the School Rally “Flight and Espionage at the Berlin Wall” here!