Download - Learning From the Visitors' Perspective
Learning from the visitors’ perspective
Dr Lynda Kelly, Head of Australian Museum Eureka Prizes, Web and Audience Research
The challenges we face …
• Conceptual shift for museums …– education to learning– responding to learners & communities– lifelong learning & educational leisure– demonstrate outcomes/performance
• Visitor-focussed learning agendas …– confusion between learning & education– dumbing down & entertainment– “thematising” learning
Stage One: Individual•Pilot studies (n=7)•In-depth interviews (n=8)•Questionnaire (n=100)•Telephone survey (n=300)
Literature Review: Identity and Learning•General learning theories•Theories influencing museum learning•How word “learning” has been researched•General definitions of identity•Identity and museums•How identity has been researched in museums
Stage Two: Sociocultural•Five families; five couples:
•Pre & post-visit interviews•Observations•Conversation analysis
– unique to an individual & shared– dependant on context– lifelong & lifewide– immediate & happens over time– active process of reflection– chosen based on interests & preferences– shaped by prior knowledge & experience– making meaning & new connections– creative & innovative– enjoyable
Learning defined
• Learning is an essential part of being human; linked to our identity & sense of self:– we all have an intrinsic desire to learn
• Learning is about change:– surface learning (new facts, skills)– deep learning (changing as a person)
PLACE•school
•museums, galleries,
cultural institutions
•libraries
•internet
•environment/nature
•life
MUSEUM LEARNING:PARTICIPATION
PROCESS•“doing something”
•hands-on
•objects & tools
•cognitive & physical
•surface & deep
PURPOSE•motivation
•interests
•enjoyment
•change
•choice
PEOPLE•family
•friends, colleagues, work
•accompanying adults
•community
•professionals:
•museum staff
•teachers
PERSON•prior knowledge, experience
•role
•gender
•cultural background
•lived history
•personal interest
•personal change
•meaning making
•seeing in different way
PRODUCT•facts & ideas
•short & long-term
•linking
•outcomes
•meaning making
•change
•Expanding your knowledge, a new aspect on life (Interview #11)
•Finding your place in the world. Engaging with the world in a way to discover more about it and make sense of things. That’s the big picture (Interview #40)
•Being able to put pieces of information together [to] draw conclusions (Interview #71)
•New things that add to your body of knowledge (Interview #78)
PERSON
THREE ROLES PLAYED
• Visit manager
• Museum expert
• Learning-facilitator
Visit manager
Liz. Let’s look down the back; check if there’s anything down there we need to see.
Liz. Shall we go and have a look back there? We might find something that you like Paul.
Museum expert
Rox. How do they catch them, Mum? I wonder what they put them in a bottle for?
Mary. So you can see them, ‘cos the backs are white, so you can see them better.
Tara. Eoww, disgusting! Look at the little bugs … with a needle through them.
Liz. Well that’s just to hold them in place.
Art. That’s from India again.
Dot. I know, I wonder where they find them. Just walking along?
Art. I don’t know, probably dug up from somewhere. Caves, mines, it doesn’t say.
Learner-facilitator
Kay. Come and look at this. What is that? Where’s that from Zeke?
Zeke. Bali.
Kay. Yes, good boy.
Zeke. I knew that.
Kay. How did you know that?
Zeke. Because it has all these on it “Javanese and Balinese” [reading from text] in the second line. I’ll tell you why I knew it was Balinese, because I saw those little gold things in Bali.
Obviously [learning is] something that’s not boring, something that’s not passive, so it’s more of an active thing … Something where you choose to be involved, that you’re interested in doing. (Interview Transcript 3.1, 22/11/00)
PURPOSE
•Opening the mind to new experience (Interview #4)
•Acquiring new knowledge and applying that (Interview #5)
•Expanding your knowledge about an area by a variety of means (Interview #11)
•A hands-on experience where [a person] can be involved with something, must be experiential (F3)
•Growth, development, change (F2)
PROCESS
PEOPLE
… sometimes we’d bounce off something of interest to ourselves, then we’d look at it a bit more, wander off. Then we’d come together a few times to have a look at things. … I also learned a bit more about my friends. I didn’t know they had an interest in [tattoos] either, and you sort of learn more of what they’re about as well. (Interview Transcript 3.4, 24/02/01)
Rick. Hey Kate look at these ones, how’s that for a shell?
Kate. That’s an unusual one.
Toni. That’s beautiful.
Kate. Were shells alive, are shells alive?
Rick. They’ve got things inside them.
Toni. Molluscs in them.
Kate. But are the actual shells alive?
Toni. No.
Rick. They’re a shell.
Toni. I think the shell is the shell of the mollusc that originally lived in them, like a snail.
Kate. So they’re part of something?
Toni. They’re part of something that was, yes.
SHARING LEARNING
• Libraries
• Museums, galleries, other cultural institutions
• University, school, formal education
• Internet
• Holiday destinations, the environment
PLACE
Ed. Look at the seahorses.
Cath. Like the one in the salt water.
Bree. They’re just so cute and they swim along…
Ed. I’d hate to be bitten by these fish, look at the teeth!
Cath. But they don’t normally attack. … When we go to Port Stephens next week we should go and find the white seahorses. Wouldn’t that be mad if we see one and we go, that’s a white seahorse. The guy’s going to just look at us [and go] how do you know that!
PLACE
•A new way of looking at something – new facts, an interaction (Interview #28)
•The application of knowledge to new circumstances (Interview #55)
•Enhancing my understanding of the world and acting on that understanding (C5)
•Taking in what you see around you and using that in your everyday life (C4)
PRODUCT
…You have this stereotype about people who’ve got tattoos and it really gives you a different perspective on it … I probably just thought it was an abuse to your body, sort of, beforehand ... And since then, like, when people have piercings I just look at it, not stare at it, and think about where they got it, what sort of thing they had done. (Interview Transcript 3.4, 24/02/01)
Deep change
Linking to past, present & future life experiences
Kate. Are they stick insects?Toni. Some of them are. That’s at the end of Lord
Howe Island, Ball’s Pyramid.Kate. Did we sail past that?Toni. We didn’t sail past that but we flew nearby. You
could see it from the top of the mountain Daddy climbed. Look at the frogs. Look at the size of
those. Not like our piddly little ones.Kate. Like that small one? [points]Toni. Ours would be like that.
PROCESS
LEARNING IDENTITY
(PERSON)
PRODUCT PEOPLE
PURPOSE
PLACE
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