Playgroups & Family Centers
Families across Western Massachusetts can connect through local playgroups and family resource centers. These gatherings offer opportunities for social play, parent support, and community connection.
Families across Western Massachusetts can connect through local playgroups and family resource centers. These gatherings offer opportunities for social play, parent support, and community connection.
Biking the Ashuwillticook Rail Trail in northern Berkshire County offers a scenic way to learn about local ecology and history. Interpretive signs and natural beauty help foster a strong sense of place along this peaceful riverside path.
In Northampton, a self-guided walk through the Living History Garden invites intergenerational visitors to explore how seeds tell stories. From Wampanoag farming practices to abolitionist efforts, the plants here carry cultural memory that reflects land, identity, and resilience.
Explore the prehistoric past of Turners Falls on a self-guided geologic walking tour that begins at the Great Falls Discovery Center. Perfect for intergenerationallearning, this walk highlights local rock formations and fossil evidence that reveal how the land was shaped nearly 200 million years ago.
In South Hadley, the Hahn-Warner Arboretum invites visitors to learn through observation. Explore tree species and get curious about botany and dendrology while walking peaceful trails that highlight nature’s resilience and diversity.
Ancestral Bridges in Amherst reimagines landmarks through art and history. Each sculptural hat invites visitors to learn about the town’s Black and Afro-Indigenous heritage, linking creativity, community, and place.
Explore marble arches, glacial potholes, and hidden echoes at Natural Bridge State Park in Adams. This self-guided walk invites all ages to learn about geology and natural history in a setting shaped by oceans, ice, and time.
At Bartholomew’s Cobble in Sheffield, families can learn about biodiversity and natural history through a hike across varied habitats shaped by ancient bedrock. Trails offer opportunities to explore how geology influences plant life in this unique landscape.
Discover how paper manufacturing shaped Turners Falls on a self-guided historic walking tour beginning at the Great Falls Discovery Center. Learn how canals, mills, and workers built an industrial village where water, labor, and ingenuity powered community and innovation.
Explore Chesterwood in Stockbridge through self-guided tours that support art studies. Learn how Daniel Chester French blended sculpture and landscape, and consider how public art reflects history, process, and place.
Spend the day at Hancock Shaker Village in Pittsfield with the whole family. Say hello to farm animals, explore the Round Stone Barn, and watch live demos in weaving and baking. Wander garden paths or forest trails and learn how the Shakers lived close to nature.
At Mount Holyoke Range State Park in Amherst, walk through geologic time to learn how basalt ridges, lava flows, and footprints tell the story of dinosaurs and shifting continents, offering insight into geology and the history beneath our feet.
In Amherst, The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art presents an exhibition where visitors learn how food shaped Carle’s art. His collages reveal how everyday meals become lasting stories through creativity.
What happens before page one? At The Carle in Amherst, the exhibit Open + Shut draws attention to endpapers, those first and last pages that frame a story. With both historical and contemporary examples, this exhibit invites self-directed learners to see how design can shape narrative meaning.
Visit Magic Wings to learn about butterflies up close. With thousands flying freely, this indoor garden is full of color, motion, and life. Explore butterfly behavior, rainforest ecology, and the delicate balance between pollinators and plants in this living classroom.
Ever wondered what storytime looks like with a splash of song and a dash of design? The Gabrielle Healy Carroll Storytime Program at The Eric Carle Museum turns reading into a full-sensory celebration of words, pictures, and play.
Every stand at the Holyoke Farmers’ Market tells a story. For teens interested in food justice, ecology, or small business, it’s a chance to ask questions, think critically, and see how local choices can have global impact, all while picking out fresh snacks!
Cruise through time with Heritage Riverboat Cruises in Northfield. This scenic experience offers a chance to learn about local geology, birdlife, and ecosystems while connecting with the Connecticut River’s natural history.
Northampton Parents Center offers Mucho Gusto, a free 7-week series where kids explore Spanish through music and rhythm. Families learn how joyful movement supports early childhood language growth.
At the Farmers' Market at Forest Park, you can learn where your food comes from, talk to farmers, and see what’s in season while picking out fresh produce for the week! It’s a great place for kids and families to explore healthy eating, money math, and how local farmers grows our food.
Guided tours at the Porter-Phelps-Huntington Museum in Hadley connect local history to broader themes of labor, land, and legacy. Step inside to learn how everyday objects and written records reflect the lives of all who lived and worked at Forty Acres.
Experience the Naumkeag Pumpkin Show in Stockbridge, where glowing jack-o-lanterns illuminate the Berkshires. Get curious about its roots in Celtic folklore and how Irish immigrants introduced pumpkin carving to America.