Learn how to take the right medicine and make your own pills...Korean-German Pharmaceutical Museum Recruits Participants for 2025 Summer Vacation Program
Jun 18, 2025
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Applications for the summer vacation program, which will be held simultaneously at the Korean-German Pharmaceutical Museum in Eumseong, Chungcheongbuk-do from July 25 to August 17, and at the newly opened Korean-German Pharmaceutical Museum Seoul last year, are available on the website of the Korean-German Pharmaceutical Museum. The July program can be booked from June 19 and the August program from July 17.
Representative programs include △ I am a pharmacist △ mysterious body exploration △ making magic photo cards. Today, I am a pharmacist for elementary school students, and it is an experiential education program where you learn various forms of medicine and how to take it properly with a pharmacist teacher, and make your own pills using a regular period. Mysterious body exploration is a program for infants and lower grades in elementary school that solves curiosity about human organs, creates a simple stethoscope, and enhances understanding of the body. In addition, Magic Photo Card Making is an exhibition-linked program that can be participated by all ages, and after appreciating Seo Yeon-jin's exhibition of 『Left: And Leaving" at Life Gallery, you can create a photo card using the 'renticular" effect, which changes the image depending on the angle.
In addition to the program, participants can see and hear explanations on world medicines such as 'Cheongja Inlaid Pharmacy', Heo Jun's 'Donguibogam Chopin', a reproduction of a traditional 19th-century German pharmacy. In addition, you can visit a Korean-German production plant equipped with an international quality management system and see how various formulations of drugs are manufactured.
Meanwhile, the Handok Pharmaceutical Museum is Korea's first corporate museum and specialized museum established in 1964 as a project to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the foundation of Korea. It is currently operated by the Handok Jeseok Foundation, a public interest corporation, and has a total of 20,000 medical artifacts from around the world, including six treasures, two designated cultural heritages in Chungcheongbuk-do, one registered cultural heritage, and two important national science and technology materials.
This article was translated by Naver AI translator.