
Walking and talking in Canadian cities since 2009
1-800-691-9320

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Whether you’re teaching Canadian history, urban geography, civics, or something unique, we can build a tour experience that fits your curriculum and your schedule. We’ve worked with teachers across Ontario, the Yukon, and the U.S. to create memorable, student-friendly walking tours that spark engagement and make planning easy.
Tell us your learning goals, timeframe, and start/end location—we’ll take care of the rest. Need a hybrid tour that blends elements from multiple neighbourhoods? A walk focused on immigration, social justice, architecture, or the arts? We’ve done them all. Our experienced guides can also manage your group for the day as part of our Tour Manager service, helping with logistics, transitions, and timing.
No cookie-cutter field trips here. Just meaningful, flexible, and fun experiences designed with your students in mind.
Highlights:
Tailored content to match your curriculum and grade level
Choose your own start and end locations for easy scheduling
Focus on themes like immigration, architecture, civics, urban geography, the arts, or social justice
Combine elements from multiple tours into one experience
Flexible timing: 60, 90, or 120 minutes at no extra charge
Professional, engaging guides experienced with student groups
Ideal for enrichment programs, project-based learning, and student travel groups
Chaperones always complimentary
Subjects by Grade:
Examples of How These Align with the Ontario Curriculum:
Grade 5 Social Studies:
Strand B: The Role of Government and Responsible Citizenship
→ Great fit for civic engagement tours or City Hall visits
Grade 6 Social Studies:
Strand A: Communities in Canada, Past and Present
→ Useful for immigration, urban history, and cultural diversity tours
Grade 7 History & Geography:
History: New France and British North America (1713–1800)
Geography: Physical Patterns in a Changing World
→ Can tie in to foundational Toronto history and natural features like the shoreline
Grade 8 History & Geography:
History: Confederation & Nation Building (1850–1914)
Geography: Global Settlement: Patterns and Sustainability
→ Urban development, immigration waves, industrial Toronto
Grade 9 Geography (Academic & Applied):
Themes: Interactions in the Physical Environment, Managing Resources, Liveable Communities
→ Great match for urban planning, green space, infrastructure tours
Grade 10 Civics & History:
Civics: Political Inquiry, Governance, Active Citizenship
History: Canada 1914–Present
→ Can highlight protests, public memory, civic sites, and local figures
Grades 11/12:
Law, Politics, Travel & Tourism, Indigenous Studies, Visual Arts
→ Flexible depending on your theme—graffiti, social movements, colonial history, legal history, etc.
ESL/ELL:
While not a subject in itself, experiential learning and real-world context is explicitly encouraged in Ontario ESL guidelines. Cultural orientation and communication through place-based learning is a perfect fit.