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With the inclusion of the First World War into the National
Curriculum, many schools are now recognising the enormous benefits
of a short trip to the battlefields where all the dry statistics
of the classroom suddenly take form as the pupils experience the
muddy reality of a wet trench or the stark tragedy of thousands of
graves.
Salient Tours have now taken many schools on such trips and we are
proud of their success. We are able to organise our tours to make
them especially relevant to pupils with, for example, a visit to
the grave of the youngest British soldier killed in the war who
was aged just fourteen. To assist the teaching staff we supply the
pupils with worksheets and study packs that are specific to the
different sites and we are uniquely aware that a tour for children
has to be arranged in a totally different way to a tour for adults
with among other things, many more toilet stops included! Our
expertise in this field has also been recognised by some of the
UK's leading educational tour operators who commission us to
manage their trips.
Our experience has shown us that most schools visit the Great War
battlefields not to teach the pupils political and military
history. Important as these things are, they can be taught in a
classroom at home. Rather, we believe that schools take pupils to
the battlefields to bring home to them the scale of the war and
most importantly, the human cost.
Things that can only be truly
understood by those who have visited Ypres and stood amongst
12,000 young men, men who died fighting for possession of a tiny
village on a slender ripple of a ridge, 12,000 graves that are a
mere 7% of one side's losses in only three months of fighting; or,
as at Thiepval on the Somme, walking across the grass to the
towering monument and then realising with shock that it is
literally being held up with names across all faces of the sixteen
enormous pillars. Names that are the tip of the iceburg, these
being the 73,000 British soldiers missing from only four and a
half months of bitter fighting.
The effect of a trip to the battlefields has to be seen to be
believed. Within half an hour, a group of normal boisterous
teenagers can be transformed into a party of serious young people
who are suddenly realising the importance of their heritage.
As a
measure of the impact it can have we have seen teenage boys openly
and unashamedly weeping at the Menin Gate Last Post Ceremony in
Ypres because of the emotion of the event.
Pupil safety is obviously our primary concern, we strongly believe
in paying more to get the best coaches and hotels and these are
frequently checked. All coaches are almost new and of course have
seatbelts.
All aspects of the trips have full Public Liability Insurance and
details are available upon request. We are very proud of the
feedback from our schools tours and feel that our focus on the
soldier's life and his motives is the most effective approach to
the subject. We are pleased to provide contact details for schools
that have taken our tours if you would like independent referees.
For Salient Group Tours please call
0032 57 214 657
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