School life
In a Belarus classroom
Local school customs vary. The best way to learn about a class's day is to ask them directly.
Europe · Country briefing
A child-friendly mission briefing for Thursday 19 November - capital, climate, school day, languages, fun facts, native animals, and five questions to ask the class on the other side of the world.
Climate in November: Cold autumn moving towards winter; short daylight in the north.

The capital
Minsk
Photo · Wikimedia Commons
Fun facts
Belavezhskaya Pushcha
Europe's oldest and largest ancient forest - a UNESCO World Heritage Site
Open lesson
Mir Castle
A fairy-tale fortress that has stood for 500 years
Open lesson
Nesvizh Castle
A grand palace surrounded by six beautiful parks
Open lesson
Brest Fortress
A huge star-shaped fortress where the River Bug and River Mukhavets meet
Open lesson
Independence Avenue, Minsk
The grand main street of Belarus's capital city - 15 kilometres long!
Open lesson
Naroch Lake Region
Belarus's largest lake and a beloved nature escape
Open lesson
Tap any card to open a class-ready mini-lesson - for the teacher to walk through, or an older child to read aloud.
Native animals
European Bison (Zubr)
Europe's heaviest land animal - saved from extinction in Belarus!
Open lesson
White Stork
Belarus's beloved summer visitor - one of the world's stork capitals
Open lesson
Eurasian Beaver
The world's second-largest rodent - and an amazing forest engineer
Open lesson
Tap any animal to open a class-ready lesson about it.
School life
Local school customs vary. The best way to learn about a class's day is to ask them directly.
Greetings to learn
Five questions to ask
What not to assume
Culture
Food
Music
Sport
Tap any chip to open a class-ready lesson - what it is, why it matters, fun facts.
Choose Belaruswhen you register - we’ll show you the time-zone feasibility.
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