Astronomy
Victoria Day
Great Inventors
Toronto History
How We Learn
100

This planet is known for its beautiful rings, making it one of the easiest planets to recognize.

Saturn

100

Although Victoria Day celebrates Queen Victoria, the holiday is always observed on the Monday before this date, rather than on her actual birthday itself.

May 25

100

This inventor is often credited with creating the practical electric light bulb, though others worked on similar ideas before him.

Thomas Edison

100

Before it was called Toronto, the city was officially known by this name in the 1800s.

York
100

This organ uses about 20% of the body’s energy, even though it makes up only a small part of our body weight.

Brain

200

This is the name of the galaxy that contains our solar system.

Milky Way

200

This nickname for the Victoria Day long weekend refers both to the holiday timing and, jokingly, to a common case of beer.

May 2-4 weekend

200

This Scottish-born inventor is known for developing the telephone.

Alexander Graham Bell

200

This Toronto island amusement park has entertained families for generations.

Centreville

200

This sense is most strongly linked to memory and emotion.

Smell

300

This famous spacecraft first carried humans to the Moon in 1969.

Apollo
300

Queen Victoria was given this affectionate nickname because of the many royal descendants she had across Europe.

Grandmother of Europe

300

This inventor and engineer helped develop alternating current (AC) electricity systems and has a car company named after him today.

Nikola Tesla

300

This royal visit in 1959 helped officially open Toronto’s first subway line expansion.

Queen Elizabeth II

300

This part of the brain helps with attention, planning, and decision-making.

Frontal Lobe

400

This celestial event happens when the Moon moves between the Earth and the Sun, temporarily blocking sunlight.

Solar Eclipse

400

Queen Victoria’s husband, whose early death deeply affected her, shares his name with this famous Canadian province’s largest city arena district landmark.

Prince Albert

400

This Canadian inventor helped develop the first practical insulin treatment, saving millions of lives.

Frederick Banting

400

This devastating event in 1904 destroyed much of Toronto’s downtown business district.

The Great Toronto Fire

400

This brain chemical is associated with motivation, reward, and helping reinforce learning.

Dopamine

500

This term describes a rock from space that survives its journey through Earth’s atmosphere and lands on the ground.

Meteorite

500

In the province of Quebec, the same Monday is officially celebrated under a different name honoring this historical figure.

National Patriots’ Day / Journée nationale des patriotes

500

This inventor is famous for creating dynamite and later lending his name to international peace and science prizes.

Alfred Nobel

500

This historic Toronto building was once a grand railway hotel and remains a city landmark.

Fairmont Royal Hotel

500

The brain’s remarkable ability to reorganize itself by forming new connections after learning, practice, or even injury is known as this. Even as we age, the brain can continue to adapt, form new connections, and learn new skills. This ability is called:

Neuroplasticity