With support from the Institute for Museum and Library Services (IMLS), the Association of Children’s Museum (ACM) and the University of Washington’s Museology Graduate Program (UW
Museology) convened The Learning Value of Children’s Museums Research
Agenda Symposium September 10-11 in Washington, DC.
Emerging areas of study |
Children’s museum
executive directors, trustees, and education directors; museum, university, and
independent researchers and evaluators; and representatives from allied
agencies and associations from the US and international organizations brought
varied perspectives to what a field-wide, evidence-based research agenda might
include. Working with a review of research and evaluation efforts related to
learning value in children’s museums and referring to research agendas from other museum
segments, practitioners, researchers, and policy-makers engaged in a
collaborative, emergent process to identify and prioritize areas of study
needed to articulate and demonstrate distinct learning impacts of children’s
museums.
Research activity in
children’s museums has grown more slowly than in other parts of the museum
field. Research was not part of the originating mindset for this newer museum
segment, one not based in collections or grounded in a studied discipline. Children’s
museums’ grass-roots and significant growth in the last 30 years along with
concentration on establishing an identity within their communities and the
museum field have, perhaps, redirected some of the energy that otherwise might have advanced research on audience, learning, impact, and value as well as
made room for more evaluation of exhibits and programs.
Anticipating the Symposium
prompted me to reflect on changes in research and evaluation in children’s
museums that I have seen in the last 3 decades.
Treasured ancient scanned photo |
I can’t account for the
nature or extent of research that occurred before 1980. In fact, I wasn’t
really aware that what we were doing to start Madison Children’s Museum (MCM)
in 1980 could possibly be considered research. From about 1980 and through the following decade, research took the form of visiting and closely observing what other
children’s museums were doing in exhibits, programs, and kits. Like others
starting a children’s museum in those years, MCM’s board visited the few-and-far
between children’s museums. We took photos and kept notes; we also begged for
photos of exhibits from people we knew had visited the few museums we were aware of. I still have treasured photos from Boston Children’s Museum, the
Children’s Museum of Denver, Los Angeles Children’s Museum, and The Children’s
Museum of History, Science, and Technology in Utica (NY). This collegial
approach of learning from (and copying) other museums has continued and evolved. Thirty years
later, children’s museums use ACM’s Benchmark Calculator and Metrics Reports
with data on facilities, square footage, exhibits, programs, attendance,
membership, staff training, etc. for a range of purposes, planning and improving experiences.
For the first 3 years I
was at Minnesota Children’s Museum, I couldn’t imagine how we could possibly conduct
research when merely planning exhibits and programs consumed us.
Fortunately a research opportunity came our way. The late Herb Pick Herb, a
professor at the Institute for Child Development at the University of Minnesota
(U of MN) was a regular at our monthly Behavior-Environment Lunch group of
architects, landscape architects, museum developers, designers, and university faculty where we shared projects and research. Herb introduced us to his
colleague, the late Dr. Allen W. Burton, a professor in the School of
Kinesiology. In 1990, Dr. Burton conducted research on toddler’s motor
development in Habitot, the Museum’s infant-toddler environment. Other children’s
museums have also served as a context for research conducted by others and have
been recognized as a source of valuable information of high interest to allied fields of
psychology, child development, cognitive development, etc.
In 1992, Minnesota
Children’s Museum kicked off planning for construction of a new 65,000 s.f. facility
by conducting 10 focus groups with educators, parents, cultural leaders, and
representatives from diverse communities. In addition, each of the gallery
teams was expected to field several focus groups or conversations with
children. This front-end evaluation (although we didn’t call it that then) felt
new at the time and offered a rich source of first-hand information from
visitors, community members, and children that became touchstones for shaping
the Museum's 5 galleries.
Two issues of Hand To Hand expanded our world and our thinking about learning in museums and the role of
research and the more prevalent evaluation. (Thank you, editor, Mary Maher!) The
Winter 1989 Hand To Hand issue focused on research and evaluation with articles
on the nature of research and evaluation in children’s museums, who should do
evaluation, and learning about learning, along with several case studies. The Summer
1996 issue of Hand To Hand included a research review on museum-based learning
in early childhood. Looking back, I can glimpse a culture of research in
children’s museums, while small and scattered, beginning to emerge with some of
these efforts focusing on areas in the children’s museums.
In 1997 I began working as
an independent museum planner (and sometimes evaluator and researcher) with many
museums. Working with science centers and museums across the country afforded
me a broader view of research and evaluation activity at a time of growing
expectations for museum research, increasing activity, and expanding capacity. This
role also exposed me to emerging areas of study, networks including university
partnerships, independent research and evaluation practitioners, and museum-friendly research
methods. I was often able to gather and share research and evaluation activity from one museum with another.
Increasing research in museums, science centers, zoos, and aquarium, was gradually finding
its way into children’s museum. A children’s museum study in 1997, Project Explore, conducted at Please Touch Museum with Harvard
University’s Project Zero, researched how children 4 and 5 years old engaging with exhibits might lead
to learning. An increasing awareness
of the potential of research to deepen understanding of the value of museums
also prompted inclusion of developing a research and evaluation agenda as an
objective in Minnesota Children’s Museum’s 2000 Education Plan. In 2005 Chicago
Children’s Museum developed a set of research-based Standards of Excellence in Early Learning: A Model for Chicago Children’s Museum, a synthesis of
best practices that supported the Museum in reaching its goals.
Symposium participants, including Dr. Wood |
No comments:
Post a Comment