The National - News

EXPO 2020 TO ATTRACT A MILLION SCHOOL VISITORS

▶ Special tours will teach school pupils the history of world fairs

- RAMOLA TALWAR BADAM

Tens of thousands of pupils will visit Dubai Expo 2020 once it opens in just under a year’s time.

This month, the Ministry of Education signed an agreement with private education groups throughout the country, committing to more than one million school visits to the 438-hectare site in Dubai South.

Organisers said special tours would teach children the history and significan­ce of expos and build on the numerous school visits that have been carried out so far.

More than 1,000 pupils from Dubai British School have already been to the constructi­on site and there are plans for 9,000 children from school developer Taaleem to visit the area.

“The children have a good understand­ing not just about where the expo site is physically but also what the reason behind the expo is and the opportunit­ies made available,” said Dubai British School principal Brendon Fulton.

“As part of our social studies programme we want them to reflect on how important it is that this is being held in Dubai, what this means for the legacy of the UAE and its vision for a sustainabl­e future.”

The school hopes pupils will be inspired enough to participat­e in a young innovators challenge. The winners will have their ideas for inventions featured online or at the expo.

“We are looking at giving pupils an opportunit­y to think of their own inventions across the three Expo 2020 themes of opportunit­y, mobility and sustainabi­lity,” Mr Fulton said.

“One thing all of them wanted to know at the start was what the expo actually is. So we did a lot of work looking at different inventions that took place at expos in the past.”

The Visitors’ Centre presents quirky informatio­n about inventions displayed at previous expos – such as Heinz Tomato Ketchup being introduced at the Philadelph­ia World Exposition in 1876.

The telephone was also displayed for the first time at that fair and, almost a century later, the mobile phone at Expo ’70 in Osaka, Japan.

Site visits to Dubai South have also got children thinking about getting involved in the Expo 2020 Young Stars challenge.

Some are now making plans to perform at the giant Al Wasl Plaza domed structure, creating shows that capture the spirit of the world fair.

“We are brainstorm­ing to try to think of ideas centred on the Expo 2020 themes,” said Shreya Parikh, 13, from Indian High School in Dubai, who recently visited the site with her parents.

“It will be very different from our school performanc­es. We need to think of a theatrical show that has a broad plot and is not too heavy on dialogue so it will be understood by people who speak different languages,” she said.

Schools keen on signing up have been asked to send informatio­n, photograph­s and video of past performanc­es with specifics about originalit­y in musical scores and themes.

“Expo 2020 is placing school pupils at its heart and contributi­ng to a positive, lasting impact on our children’s present and future,” said Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed, chief executive of Emirates airline and the Emirates Group and chairman of the Higher Committee of Expo 2020 Dubai.

Four school tours have been designed and will run throughout the six-month world fair.

Tickets cost Dh50 for each pupil per trip and schools can register online by the end of the year.

 ?? Expo 2020 Dubai ?? More than 1,000 pupils from Dubai have already visited the Expo 2020 site to see how constructi­on is progressin­g
Expo 2020 Dubai More than 1,000 pupils from Dubai have already visited the Expo 2020 site to see how constructi­on is progressin­g

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