We visited another secondary school in Berlin this morning, which means it houses students in grades 7-10. I got to sit in on a 7th grade Geography class where we had the opportunity to have a Q & A session with the students. They wanted to know where in the U.S. all of us were from, what our favorite German food has been, and if students in the U.S. could have cell phones or chew gum at school.
Our afternoon appointment was a meeting with a sociologist who works for a research institution in Berlin. This institution looks at issues and trends regarding education, immigration, economics, etc. After we ended our discussion we went to the Berlin Wall Documentation Memorial and Center. This is where there is still some of the Berlin Wall standing. It is significant because it happens to be at a point where the citizens were in East Berlin when inside their apartments, but as soon as they stepped outside of the building they were in West Berlin. When the Berlin Wall was built, many of these residents jumped out of their windows into West Berlin to escape the Soviets and the GDR.
We ended our evening with a wonderful farewell dinner as this was our last day in Berlin. Tomorrow we will be taking a train to our final city on the tour, which is Frankfurt. I had white asparagus and new potatoes with Hollandaise sauce and schnitzel, a traditional Austrain dish of breaded and fried veal.
Above: The outside of the Berlin Philharmonic.
Above: Part of the Berlin Wall still standing at the Berlin Wall Memorial and Documentation Center.
Above: The dinner of schnitzel, asparagus, and potatoes.
Above: An original watch tower from East Germany shown at the Berlin Wall Memorial. The tall metal wall to the right of the tower symbolizes the Iron Curtain.