This ten-week University of Edinburgh course uses the museum's decorative arts collections to examine how materials, belief systems, trade, industry, and technology have shaped crafted objects.
This five-week gallery-based course traces how specific colors have shaped culture, society, and art from the past to the present.
This under-5 program introduces museum themes through songs, rhymes, movement, sensory play, and handled objects in a secure learning space.
This weekly Friday drop-in series invites families to explore a new museum theme each session through object handling, short demonstrations, stories, and quick craft activities in the Grand Gallery.
This recurring social program is designed for people living with dementia and their supporters, combining relaxed conversation with curator talks, object handling, creative activities, tea, and cake.
This immersive temporary exhibition explores giant prehistoric animals that lived after the dinosaurs, with life-sized 3D sculptures, skeletons, fossils, and interactive paleontology displays.
This monthly relaxed museum morning offers a calmer visit for people with sensory needs, neurodiverse visitors, families, and others who prefer lower sensory stimulation.
This recurring sensory-play program welcomes children with additional support needs and their families for hands-on, flexible sessions inspired by the museum's collections.
These child-only sessions for ages 7-11 use games, activities, and gallery visits to explore the museum's collections without adult helpers in the room.
These reduced-capacity sessions are designed for children with additional support needs and their families, combining games, activities, and an optional gallery visit in a slower-paced setting.
This after-hours tour of Giants is designed for blind and partially sighted visitors, combining audio description with tactile opportunities and time to explore independently.
This members-only preview offers early access to Scotland's First Warriors before the public opening, with extended exhibition hours and the Carnoustie Hoard among the highlights.
This free temporary exhibition examines conflict in prehistoric Scotland, from the Neolithic to the Romans, through more than 250 objects and major discoveries such as the Carnoustie Hoard.
This summer drop-in series offers themed family activities on Mondays and Fridays, with a different hands-on museum topic each week.
This two-night August ceilidh brings back one of the museum's festival evening events for a pair of lively summer sessions.
This Deaf-led tour explores the Giants exhibition in British Sign Language through its life-sized prehistoric animals and key stories.
This early-opening curator tour offers behind-the-scenes insight into Scotland's First Warriors, from the Carnoustie Hoard to the exhibition's design and research questions.
This upcoming temporary exhibition will examine Scotland's place in the Roman world through new research, major loans, and discoveries from frontier communities such as Inveresk.