Photo credit: Robert Stadler |
There
are countless reasons why asking
questions is important. Valued as tools for thinking and engaging socially,
questions are critical to
learning, innovation, success, and even to happiness. We ask questions to
help resolve uncertainty; to fill the gaps between what we know and don’t know;
to direct our attention; to explore alternative
points of view; to find relationships among ideas, objects, and situations; to open up to possibilities we can’t yet fully
imagine; and
to probe discrepancies.
There
are abundant resources and ideas about questions and inquiry. Models for the
inquiry process surface on education, business, and arts websites. One model says,
“The first step in the inquiry process is the art of asking Good Questions.” Another lists what
makes good questions: avoid questions with a yes/no answer; don’t ask a question
you know the answer to; ask one question at a time; don’t fish for the answer
you want. Along with lists of ways to ask better questions, there are lists of
questions to develop skills at different levels of thinking. Author Daniel H. Pink
talks about the “art of asking questions” and extending the power of questions
beyond science.
The reality is, questions are ubiquitous.
Tests are full of them as are applications for passports, on-line security
(what is your mother’s maiden name?), and tax forms. We are asked at the
grocery check-out line if we found everything we were looking for. Parents quiz
their children about what they did at school and teachers ask questions in the
classroom.
Nevertheless, questions are often not
very productive, not asked of the right person, courageous enough, or well
timed. I
know. While I deeply believe in the power of questions, I often frame a
question only when I get stuck and have nothing else to try. I have written
blog posts about questions, imagining that by doing so readers might ask more
and better questions. It’s as if knowing how to ask good questions means we will
do so; as if having an exercise routine means we will work out; or knowing arugula is healthy means we will eat lots.
Increasingly,
I wonder more about why we don’t ask more–and better–questions in museums and less
about what a good question is and how questions can be useful in our work.
How Can
Museums Become Places Rich With Questions?
If questions are critical to learning, innovation, success, and even to happiness, then
shouldn’t museums be full of questions?
How,
though, does a museum cultivate an inquisitive spirit collectively,
purposefully, and over time? Models
and lists may be useful tools for framing questions. Good intentions may be essential
for advancing questions. Even together, however, they are limited in how they can infuse a museum’s life with questions. It’s not enough for a few enthusiasts
in a museum to advocate for questions and inquiry, to have a single inquiry-based
program, or to bring questions to a major decision occasionally. As places
where people engage in daily practices to develop engaging experiences around a
larger purpose to generate greater public value, museums must encourage and
advance questions wholeheartedly, actively, in each of those ways: through
people, practices, purpose and culture.
A Disposition to Ask Questions. Do you know someone who
readily asks good questions? Someone who is curious? Likes the challenge of a
chewy question?
Hire
that person; cultivate that trustee; recruit that volunteer. Those people have
a disposition to ask questions. A disposition is a
habit or behavior displayed frequently and in the appropriate context. An
inclination or a tendency to act in particular way, dispositions are voluntary.
They are also environmentally
sensitive; they are acquired, supported, or weakened by the conditions of the surrounding
environment, by the interactive experiences in settings and engagement with
significant adults and peers.
People
inclined to ask questions raise them at staff or board meetings, in an
interview, on a project team. They test assumptions, share a question they have been mulling over, structure
a wandering discussion with questions, and search for answers. When a strategic
plan is being framed, a capital project is discussed, or the budget is reviewed,
they introduce questions to dig deeper, engage other perspectives, and explore
misconceptions. What are we not thinking about? Do we have the necessary
capacity to do this? Are these projections too rosy? What’s our plan B? They
ask whether
the museum is comfortable with the input on content funders expect to make.
Leaders ask questions
whether they are board or staff leaders, thought leaders, or leaders advocating
for inclusion, quality, or change.
Because dispositions are
affected by the surrounding social and intellectual environment, the presence
of colleagues, trustees, and volunteers who ask questions makes a difference in a work environment. I imagine others have noticed that each post on Rebecca
Herz’s blog, Museum Questions, is a question such as,
“What is the role of museums in educational change?” Colleagues asking
questions seek others to share questions with; they engage others in inquiry. In doing so they help grow the disposition and skills in
others to ask and pursue questions. These may be questions that engage various perspectives and bring in
fresh ideas; express an interest in other people, what they think, say and who
they are. Questions set a tone that people matter, that new
ideas and all kinds of learning matters.
Daily Practice with Questions.Museums do use questions
as part of daily practice across many areas. Questions are fundamental to the
inquiry process, an approach to learning familiar in science centers and museums
and across various settings. Q?rious is a science
education program at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History that,
along with question-driven inquiries, invites students to ask questions of
scientists.
Some
museums use practices, like Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS), as
a programmatic approach for tours. VTS is a question-based methodology used in
art and other museums and nature centers to explore selected works of art or
the natural world. An educator, docent, curator, or naturalist facilitates
discussion of 3 open-ended questions with a group: What's going on (in this picture)? What
do you see that makes you say that? What more can we find?
“Questioning and posing problems” is one of a set of 16 Habits of Mind
(HoM), also considered dispositions. Some museums’ learning frameworks are
built around HoM and some around inquiry. The framework’s key ideas inform
program and exhibit planning and evaluation. (Interestingly, Bena mentioned in
the opening story happens to be the co-author with Art Costa of the 16 Habits
of Mind.) In fact, what is evaluation but a response to a question, how well and in what ways did we accomplish
what we hoped we would? Prototyping asks questions iteratively about
whether the visitor gets the idea or understands what’s happening in an
exhibit.
Presumably, the more questioning strategies a museum integrates into its daily
practices, the greater the benefit from the power of questions it is likely to
enjoy. It’s not, however, simply that a museum uses VTS, prototypes, has an
inquiry model, or uses all three. A commitment to asking questions is often confined
to the education department. Questions may be geared towards getting others to think about our interests. Even chewy, engaging, and open-ended questions tend to be
limited episodes when they are not intentionally related to larger intentions.
For
impact, these practices and approaches must be played out in the context of strategic,
pedagogical, experiential, audience, and financial goals that serve the
museum’s enduring interests.
An Internal Culture that Values Questions.In a speech to graduates at The California Institute of Technology, surgeon,
researcher, and author Atul Gawande distinguished truth seeking and truth: pursuing ideas with curiosity,
inquisitiveness, openness, and discipline as part of a larger group. Gawande’s distinction is
also useful in characterizing a museum that, collectively and explicitly, places a
value on asking questions, searching for answers, having impact, and learning together.
Does
your museum have an expressed commitment to constructing knowledge, growing,
and taking action through questions, dialogue, listening, observation,
disagreement, and challenge? In what ways is this reflected in its vision,
mission, and values? How does your museum live this value or set of values daily? How
does it infuse its internal culture with an organizational disposition to
question? How does it integrate and make room for supportive practices across the
museum? Committing to an institutional value around questioning inevitably creates
multiple shifts from individual advocates and isolated practices to teams of
people engaged in cross-functional mission and question driven practices.
A
museum’s questions reveal much about what it holds in high regard. Do you explore
such questions: What do we care most about being really good at? What do
access and inclusion look like in our museum and for our community? Do we push
on being more relevant for more people and for more people who are different from us?
How much risk are we willing to take? How might we mitigate this risk? Are we
asking questions about the source of funding and the strings attached to a
particular gift from a funder?
A
museum that is awake to its own curiosity asks tough questions and pays
attention to the responses. Is your museum’s strategic planning process
question driven or framed by assertions about quality, being a premier regional
resource? When you ask questions do you pay attention to the answers or are
they ignored when inconvenient? Has your museum been in a situation
when someone raised the question that no one has been willing to ask?
For instance, “Do we really need a building this big? Will we be able to
sustain operations? Be a thriving museum with this big of a building?” Do you
question the easy answers? “Yes, we have an emergency plan, but have we tested it?”
Questions
make us all learners. If your museum
considers itself a learning organization, how does it learn?
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