What does this space say about learning? (Photo credit: Atelier of water Energy: Agriturismo Il Ginepro) |
Twenty-five
years ago I first came across the image of the
environment as the third teacher in a brochure for The Hundred Languages of
Children exhibit from the Municipal Schools in Reggio Emilia (IT). I was
intrigued and delighted with the idea that the environment, along with parents
and the teacher, was understood to promote the child’s well-being, offer learning
opportunities, and support independence, in beautiful, thoughtfully arranged
settings.
The idea
wasn’t new to me. My graduate work had focused on the relationship between
humans and the environment, between behavior and space. This vivid image,
however, expanded my thinking and inspired me to imagine ways in which museum
learning spaces could be harnessed for learning.
The Environments of Our Lives
Environments
are the lived-in containers of our lives. They are the spaces we inhabit, that shelter
and protect us, inspire and give us pleasure. They make both daily life and
grand occasions possible. At all points in the lifespan, environments represent
an emergent context and force that shape behavior, inform choices, and deliver
information.
The physical
environment is more than the shape of a space or its full volume. It is more
than the arrangement of furniture, the materials and finishes that cover surfaces,
the combinations of walls and openings, light and sound. Our environment surrounds us. We
engage with it directly, on many levels, and throughout our lives.
What does this space say about learning? (Milwaukee Art Museum. Photo credit: Vergeront) |
Contexts layered
with meaning, environments signal what goes on in a space and at successive
scales. This is a playground; that is a place to worship; this is a place for commercial
exchange, that is a public gathering space, a place for sports, or a private,
personal space. Scale and the configuration of space; qualities of light,
sound, and smells; materials and surfaces add to the broad clues of
function. Is this school welcoming? Is this park safe? Can I accomplish my
tasks? Can I stay here and explore?
Although clearly
physical, built and
natural environments are also emotional, social, and cognitive spaces. They
affect us across a range of emotions, making us feel at ease or anxious,
competent or inadequate, motivated or discouraged. Some spaces encourage social
interactions; they bring us together, facilitate connections, and invite
conversations; and other spaces isolate us. We can be intellectually invigorated
by our surroundings, intrigued by materials and objects that encourage us to
ask questions, have ideas, investigate, and pursue choices.
An
environment may be consistent with our expectations, facilitate our intentions,
and support our capabilities. Sometimes, however, its goals–or those of its
creators–are at odds with our own. The interaction of features, materials,
light, and sound can be problematic; they can challenge our understanding of where
we are and how to find our way. While soft, ambient sounds can create a
soothing backdrop to conversation, loud sounds amplified by hard surfaces make
conversation difficult, especially for people with limited hearing.
Surroundings
with a sense of soul that resonate deeply with our own invite us to linger while
a soulless container hurries us to leave. Across all domains, environments can facilitate
or interfere with a feeling of well-being, a sense of accomplishment, rewarding
interactions with others, and bold imaginings.
Ever-present, Reaching, and Teaching
While the
concept of the environment as the third teacher emerges from the schools in Reggio,
this idea is neither limited to children nor to schools and Italy.
Art, history,
science, natural history, or children’s museums, historic houses or zoos;
indoor or outdoor, purpose built or adapted spaces are functional and experiential
entities with purpose. At least since the 1992 publication of the Association of American Museum’s Excellence and Equity, education
has been recognized as central to museums' public service.
What does this space say about learning? (Children's Museum of Southern Minnesota. Photo credit: Vergeront) |
Museums advance
their learning interests and serve their learners using a wide array of
opportunities and resources. Text
and labels; demonstrations, lectures and programs; objects and collections; curricula
and interpretation; blogs and digital resources; phenomena and planned
discovery are familiar approaches to learning in museums.
Museum
visitors, however, are not just learners when they are in a classroom or
reading a label. Like
all learners, they are minds-on,
senses-on, hands-on learners engaging directly with their surroundings and with
others wherever they are and whatever they are doing. Even when shopping, standing
in line, or relaxing in areas a museum doesn’t think of as educational, visitors are sensing, thinking, and
learning.
And
the environment is ever-present, reaching and teaching them. Space and scale; sound and light;
visual and physical access; materials, textures, colors, and objects are encouraging exploration, facilitating connections with others and with
ideas, and supporting meaning making. Conversely, these same features may be
discouraging curiosity, interfering with connections, and overwhelming the
senses.
The environment may speak louder than
words, labels, and intentions to children and
adults in how the museum:
• … is welcoming,
creates a sense of belonging, puts them at ease; and assures safety;
• … values learners as competent, active agents in their own learning;
• … supports
values such as creativity, caring, inclusiveness, or experimentation;
• … engages
the learner’s curiosity and interests and removes barriers to participation;
• … encourages
connections and promotes enjoyable interactions among
visitors and with staff;
• … increases
comfort and relieves fatigue;
• …
creates ways for learners to see traces of their doing, thinking, and learning;
• … offers
opportunities to explore, browse, reflect;
• … values
alternative perspectives and learning in different ways;
• … creates
moments of delight and beauty.
Harnessing the Environment for Learning
There are
points in a museum’s life when it does focus deliberately on its environment from
various perspectives. Typically this is when a museum constructs a new
building, remodels a space, reconfigures the entry and lobby, opens an
exhibition, adds a maker space, or upgrades exhibit components. A museum team, often
working with architects and designers, considers the size and shape of a space,
how it must work for its primary purpose and users, adjacencies and flow of
spaces, the look and feel of the space, the furniture and equipment needed. After
the opening, the space shifts to operations mode with regular cleaning and
scheduled maintenance. Taking stock of the space is unlikely until the next
remodel.
But
spaces are dynamic. As living systems that morph over time, affected by use, misuse,
and inevitable micro
changes, museum spaces evolve. Strategic goals change,
program schedules and formats are adjusted, visitor patterns shift, and new
technologies arrive as the old disappear. Some spaces groan from over use, some
are under-used, and some attract unwelcome activities.
What does this space say about learning? (NYSCi. Photo credit: Andrew Kelly) |
The
environment is an essential element of a museum’s learning value and its public
service. Harnessing this great potential to serve its learners relies on a
museum understanding its own learning interests, being attuned to the environment, and integrating these insights
into museum-wide procedures, practices, and decisions. This on-going work requires
the perspective of people from across the museum: designers, educators, visitor
service, operations, and facilities staff. And visitors. The following
practices work together and inform one another to help accomplish this.
1. Align
museum goals and interests with the environment. Museums have goals, values,
and guiding principles. They may aspire to be a more connected community, inspire
innovation, strengthen families, or promote wellbeing. By identifying examples
of how these driving principles can–and do–play out in the environment, a
museum builds a shared vocabulary around the environment as teacher that
contributes to experience planning, operations, and increasing impact. (See # 2, 4
& 5)
2. Build
space planning into experience planning. Each step in experience planning
is an opening to focusing on how qualities and features of the environment can
support learning. For instance, if
a museum wants the visitor to try something new or take a risk, what conditions must be present for
someone to experience a situation as safe, recognize new pathways, and perceive invitations to be creative? (See # 1 & 3)
3. Design,
Not Rules and Signs. What museums hope to encourage visitors to do can be
facilitated or obstructed by the environment; even a single feature can interfere with safety, comfort, or access. Spaces may
create a bottleneck; invite racing, chasing, climbing; tempt leaning on cases. A
museum can make rules and put up signs. Or it can address the problem through design
solutions and decisions about the environment. (See # 2 & 4)
What does this space say about learning? (Photo credit: New-York Historical Society Museum and Library) |
4. Modify
spaces based on information. Understanding how a space is informing the
learning that takes place emerges from information and insights. Observation,
asking questions, and listening to visitors help identify the physical qualities that encourage learning. Where is the flow of activity, traffic,
and interactions positive and humming? What qualities are present? These insights
can inform the vocabulary, experience planning, and dialogues about
space. (See # 2, 3 & 5)
5. Open
dialogues about museum spaces. Conversation among staff, volunteers, members,
community partners, people of different ages, backgrounds, and abilities expands
the environment’s capacity to support learning. These exchanges may probe what the
environment says about the museum’s view of learning, how learning opportunities are best supported, and possible improvements. When a museum and its friends explore these questions together, a bigger, more visible view of the museum
environment as teacher develops. (See #1 and #4)
What does your museum environment say about learning?
Related Museum Notes Posts
… we value space for its power to organize,
promote pleasant relationships between children of different ages, create a
handsome environment, provide changes, promote choices and activity and its
potential for sparking all kinds of social and affective learning. All this
contributes to a sense of well-being and security in children.
Loris
Malaguzzi
This is the best piece on learning and environments I've read in years. Not only have you drawn needed attention to a much misunderstood element of learning, you've provided specific discussion points that can help us focus on the relationship between architecture and people in museums.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jim. I agree that this is both a gap in understanding and resources for our field. I know that many of our colleagues deal with the "referred pain" of a disconnect between learning and environments.
ReplyDelete