Daycares, Camps, and Home Schools

We welcome visits from daycares, camps, and home schools. Come and visit us for an hour or two and you’ll be able to take advantage of fun, educational, and free activities. Our programs and activities, listed below, work best for groups of 5-15 children. Caregivers are asked to remain with their groups. Everyone, before or after they’ve enjoyed the Museum’s offerings, is invited to enjoy the lush greenery of the Bank’s indoor oasis of trees, shrubs, and tropical plants in our Garden Court.

Note: Our high season is May and June. Younger visitors especially might appreciate less crowded times of year.

Whenever you come, here is what you can look forward to.

Guided Programs

Curious Currency Chests

Thanks for letting us go to the Museum. We had fun. I liked finding the treasure chests. I also liked when you did a story with the beaver puppet.

Matt (age 6)

Étonnants coffres aux trésors

A multisensory experience for eager young minds

(for ages 3-6, from 5 to 35 participants)

Ahoy bilge rats, squid slappers, and lubbers of all sorts! We all know how much the young salts love a good pirate! How’s about lettin’ ‘em spend an hour exploring the world like rogues with our treasure chests! The swashin’ little bucklers’ll be able to comb through a skull and crossbones' worth of pirate’s treasure—each and every object once used as money in far-away places as well as right here in Canada.




Dig It!

We loved how the program is organized, the fact that the students are very involved in the activity, the use of various materials.

— Teacher, Grade 5

Dig-It!

A global perspective on currency

(for ages 8-10, from 12 to 60 participants)

Indiana Jones, look out, here comes the next generation! This program encourages children to get their hands dirty by digging into sand boxes representing different continents and plucking out a range of artifacts once used as money. Different societies around the world have come up with all kinds of notions as to what is useful as currency. Guaranteed, children will be surprised by what they unearth.



Self-Guided Activities

Julias Ceasar

Feeling a little too free-form for an educational program this time around? Check out what the Currency Museum has for the self-guided, hands-on visitor. Encompassing everything from colouring pages to scavenger hunts, the available activities are designed to help you learn more about the Museum’s many fascinating artifacts and stories. If you wish, the Museum’s guides will be happy to talk to your group and suggest suitable activities.



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