There are children’s
museums and then there are museums children visit with parents, grandparents,
and school groups. From a museum perspective–children’s museums on the one hand
and traditional museums children visit on the other–having children as visitors can
have quite different meaning. For children, however, the experience between one
type of museum and another might be less than museum people generally assume.
Memories of Museums from Childhood
Before there were children’s museums in most cities, children went to museums, liked museums, and remembered them. In my experience, they still do; and there are good reasons for it.
The Wood Gatherer |
My friend Mary grew up in Milwaukee and remembers
vividly going to the Milwaukee Art Museum
with her friends Jimmy and Linda, on their own, without adults. Frequently, even
weekly in the summer, they would walk down Astor Street and cross Juneau Park and
get into the Art Museum for free. They would always visit their favorite
paintings. Mary’s was The Wood Gatherer by Jules Bastien LePage.
Then they’d each get an ice cream sandwich at the canteen for 10 cents. Fifty
years later, Mary was at the Musee d’Orsay in Paris and came face-to-face with
her favorite painting, on loan from the Milwaukee Art Museum. It stopped her in
her tracks, brought back a flood of childhood and neighborhood memories, and made her trip.
Sweden’s Nobel
prize-winning poet Tomas Tranströmer, writes in Memories Look at Me, A Memoir about going to museums as a child in Stockholm. He starts off, “As a child, I was attracted to museums. First the Natural
History Museum. What a building! Gigantic, Babylonian, inexhaustible.” (Translated from Swedish by Robin Fulton) Tranströmer was first
taken to the museum when he was about 5 years old. At the entrance were 2
elephant skeletons, “…guardians of the gateway to the miraculous.” Inspired by
what he saw, Tranströmer visited every second Sunday, started his own
collections, and one day, met a professor, “…one of the guardian angels who
appeared now and then in my childhood and touched me with its wings.”
While children visit
children’s museums now, they also visit “big museums.” I was at a café in St Paul last
year and overheard a mother and her 3 boys ranging from 3-8 years talking about
going to the museum. Since we were several blocks from Minnesota Children’s Museum, I asked if they were headed there. The
middle child said they were going to the Minneapolis Institute of Arts to see the Terracotta Warriors. His brother added with emphasis that it was their third visit. A friend says his sister
takes her 4 grand children to the local art museum. Each of the children has a
favorite painting and insists on visiting it on every visit. Ranging from 5-10
years, they have lively discussions about the merits of their paintings.
In late 2013, 12- year old
Jake caught the attention of many museum professionals as he posted, “21 ways how
I would create an amazing museum” on his blog, Jake’s Bones.
His list about making museums awesome for everyone, especially for children, not
only demonstrates extensive museum going, but also reveals an engaged and
incisive observer and thinker about the museum experience. His astute,
visitor-centered ideas take children, their interests, and capabilities
seriously with recommendations such as, “Don’t hide the experts,” “Link
exhibits to things in the real world,” and “Have information for all levels of
knowledge.”
Recently I watched as 2 sisters
and their parents explore the extensive Degas collection at the Norton Simon
Museum
in Pasadena. Moving through several galleries, the girls took turns, pausing at
every painting or statue. Each one spent time looking the dancer and then
carefully assumed the same ballet pose as her sister and parents looked on. The
girls moved to the next painting.
In second position before Degas |
These are only my examples
and no doubt many others could add theirs. Some may stand out as exceptions; clearly
a 12-year old blogger with a book contract is unusual. Even as a small sample,
however, they show children as enthusiastic museum goers, engaged with art, collections, and
people in museums. Their visits are sources of durable experiences with
life-long significance. This challenges several notions about children in
museums: museums can’t reach children; children aren’t ready for “real” museums
until they are older; and children only like some museums–natural history and
not art.
Children Ready for Museums
Children are constantly making connections between what they see and hear and the experiences they have accumulated in even the first few years of life. Evidence of children’s interest in museums and varied expressions of their interest is apparent in the examples above. In museums children interact with people; they ask information-seeking questions about novel objects and their functions; they borrow language from others; they make meaning they carry forward to new experiences. With rich environments, great volumes of space, interesting finishes and surfaces, and real objects at actual size (very big, very small and in between), museums invite children to notice, explore, ask questions, think, and follow their interests.
Children are constantly making connections between what they see and hear and the experiences they have accumulated in even the first few years of life. Evidence of children’s interest in museums and varied expressions of their interest is apparent in the examples above. In museums children interact with people; they ask information-seeking questions about novel objects and their functions; they borrow language from others; they make meaning they carry forward to new experiences. With rich environments, great volumes of space, interesting finishes and surfaces, and real objects at actual size (very big, very small and in between), museums invite children to notice, explore, ask questions, think, and follow their interests.
Museums are simply great
places for children to learn how to learn and enjoy learning. Programs, anecdotes, and studies
illustrate how children–from babies to school-aged children, in museums of
every type–are open to and benefit from museum experiences.
Young children’s capacity
to enjoy and learn from museums is foundational for the Smithsonian Early Enrichment Center (SEEC).
For 24 years, SEEC has offered museum-based learning in an early childhood
program for children 2 months to 6 years at three sites in Washington, DC. While
it draws on The Smithsonian’s extensive collections, SEEC’s object-based approach
also builds on children’s curiosity, eagerness to make connections, and willingness
to go beyond what they see. Children explore objects and exhibits in art,
history, and science museums. They interact with curators, scientists, artists,
and cultural historians, along with museum educators to learn about the world,
get ideas, and build a positive perspective of museums.
Museum fellow, Susan
Erdman, writes about taking her toddler to museums now.
She recognizes the value of her son seeing real
things and making meaningful connections between objects–vehicles and animals–that
he has seen in books and sees at the museum or zoo. Size, color, sound, and
smells contribute information and deepen his understanding about what he’s noticing,
what’s going on, how things work, and what people are talking about. She knows
his brain is already absorbing concepts and museums help build those concepts. The Toledo Museum of Art offers
docent-lead monthly baby tours. Based on research by Dr. Kathy Danko-McGee, the
Museum’s director of education, the tours for 2-to-18 month-olds focus on interesting
shapes, lines and colors. Caregivers are encouraged to name and describe
different characteristics in a work of art supporting connections about shape,
colors, symbols, and language.
Large objects, with strong, accessible, contextual links |
In one of the few studies
to look at children in museums, Piscitelli and Anderson explored children’s perspectives and past experiences of museums. The study of 77 children 4-6 years old in Brisbane
(AU) indicates that children have extensive experience and positive
perspectives about museum settings they visited. They regard museums as places full of exciting opportunities to learn and get new ideas. Exhibits with large
objects and strong, accessible, contextual links to previous experiences and
knowledge stand out in children’s recollections. Their visual recall and verbal
descriptions of exhibits and architectural features are remarkably accurate.
Children
bring to museums a disposition to notice, get ideas, and make connections
between what they see and hear and their experiences and interests.
Museums Ready for Children
While children seem ready for museums, museums–other than children’s museums–do not necessarily seem to be ready for children. It’s not that art, history, natural history, or science museums don’t admit children. Many, if not most, do. Rather, many museums don’t really value children as children and museum goers. Consequently, they aren’t prepared to serve them in ways they serve adults, experts, tourists, etc.
While children seem ready for museums, museums–other than children’s museums–do not necessarily seem to be ready for children. It’s not that art, history, natural history, or science museums don’t admit children. Many, if not most, do. Rather, many museums don’t really value children as children and museum goers. Consequently, they aren’t prepared to serve them in ways they serve adults, experts, tourists, etc.
A typical explanation for
a museum deciding to serve children relates to audience development: reach more
young families and grow membership. Confusing a museum's need to grow with what
an audience group needs is unfortunate. Serving
children means serving them well: valuing them, recognizing the significance of
early experiences, and welcoming young children as additions to public spaces. Rather than adding an admission
category and hosting toddler Tuesdays, a museum must be prepared to welcome children and delight them.
MOHAI (Seattle) |
Museums intending to serve
children well have staff interested in and prepared to interact with and engage
children. From security, to guest services, to educators, developers and
designers, and housekeepers, staff should be as pleased to see children, as
children are to see them. Serving children well means granting them the
greatest reasonable access to galleries, rooms, and exhibits while considering
the needs of the objects and building, something that can require creative
thinking. One historic house on a very large property didn’t
allow children under 10, until it recognized that the gardens and out buildings
were great places for children to explore.
Museums committed to
serving children well adopt a set of practices suited to children in every
museum, regardless of type: multi-sensory, hands-on learning strategies;
facilitated and mediated experiences; and child-centered environments.
(In fact, the UK has a manifesto for kid-friendly museums.)
Supporting these practices is a
child-centered pedagogy that recognizes children as competent and full of
potential, as active agents in their own learning.
While museum professionals
and researchers may be convinced that young children's benefit from visiting museums include learning, they actually
know very little about these experiences and museums’ impact on
children and their learning. Mary
Ellen Munley’s 2012 literature review of research conducted in museum
settings focusing on young children’s learning concludes that this research is
lacking. Prepared for the Smithsonian Institution’s Early Learning
Collaborative Network and SEEC,
Munley’s review notes that museums do provide distinct and positive environments
to foster young children’s learning; and young children are interested in
artifacts and exhibitions in traditional museums where they learn
disciplinary-specific information (history or biology) before being exposed to
those disciplines in school settings.
Ezra and friends at the Berkeley Art Museum |
For museums interested in serving children
well, the limited research on children in museums, and children’s learning in museums in
particular, is challenging. It is not, however, surprising. The increase in serving children in programs and
initiatives in traditional museums, also highlighted in Munley’s review, is
relatively recent. Equally significant, however, is how young children’s
learning is viewed. Children’s
learning often looks different from older children’s and adults’ learning and may miss being studied.
Children as receptive viewers of contemporary art may not look like adults
being viewers of contemporary art. Children intrigued by dinosaurs may
role-play in front of the Triceratops while adults are unlikely to do so. Ideas for stories, investigating, or building come
from what children see in a painting, a sculpture, a diorama, skeleton, or
people in the museum. As long as learning is viewed as content, concepts, and
data calibrated to the school curriculum, what children actually are learning
in museums will be overlooked. In Stay Behind the Yellow Line in Curator
(56/4), Clarkin-Phillips, Carr, Thomas, Waitai, and Lowe describe a study of 3
and 4-year olds’ constructing knowledge about being a museum visitor and
exhibitor. The children’s activities demonstrated their ability to develop an
appreciation of art and an understanding of the purposes of museums and art
galleries.
Children– Knowing– Museums – Knowing – Children
There are children’s museums and then there are traditional museums that children visit . A good number of museums are somewhere in between. These are museums with a family learning focus, museums that understand that a mission of supporting life-long learning begins with babies, and museums that more-or-less ignore the distinction completely. In this group might be the:
There are children’s museums and then there are traditional museums that children visit . A good number of museums are somewhere in between. These are museums with a family learning focus, museums that understand that a mission of supporting life-long learning begins with babies, and museums that more-or-less ignore the distinction completely. In this group might be the:
- Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art (Amherst, MA)
- City Museum (St. Louis)
- American Visionary Art Museum (Baltimore)
- Exploratorium (San Francisco)
Increasingly more museums
of all types welcome children to their galleries, exhibits, programs, and
events. We know, or at least believe and hope to show, that a full range of
museum experiences for children are valuable: children visit museums in their
communities and as they travel; they actively pursue interests; they become
museum goers and engage in learning at every stage of life. Museums make
children want to explore and to learn. Hopefully children are making museums want to learn about them as well.
Related Museum Notes Posts
Thank you for this extremely informative article. As a museum docent, arts educator and media producer it's fascinating to see the research.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if kids, let’s say 5-12 years old, visit a gallery, and they’re supposed to take notes about what they saw, how do they do this. Do they take into account the seven elements of art ? I suppose kids have a different approach to art than adults when it comes to analysing a painting, for example. Who could tell me more about this ? I’m curious.
ReplyDeleteI imagine that the museum educator or tour guide thinks about this in starting to plan a tour or workshop. They start with what they want to encourage; what questions will invite looking and thinking; how to engage children in discussion; what pieces of art will engage their attention. VTS (Visual Thinking Strategies) is an approach used in many art museums (https://vtshome.org/faqs/). Teaching in the Art Museum (Rika Burnham and Elliott Ki-Kee) is a very good resource. Mike Murawski's website and blog Art Museum Teaching (https://artmuseumteaching.com/)is interesting and thought provoking. I hope some of these resources are helpful to you in continuing your exploration.
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