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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

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Karp, Madeline – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
When it comes to having a traveling outreach activity for a museum, a craft can seem like the perfect solution. It can seemingly be all things at once--educational, quick and fun. But, if poorly constructed, crafts can also have serious fallbacks. Using the Chicago History Museum and the Millennium Park Family Fun Festival as a case study, this…
Descriptors: History, Museums, Outreach Programs, Handicrafts
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Kai-Kee, Elliott – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
The establishment of the Museum Education Roundtable (MER) in 1969, the formation of the Committee on Education of the American Association of Museums (AAM) in 1973, and the creation of the Museum Education Division of the National Art Education Association (NAEA) in 1981 all represent milestones in the professionalization of museum education…
Descriptors: Museums, Arts Centers, Nonschool Educational Programs, Art Education
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Schaller, David T. – Journal of Museum Education, 2011
Museum games can be a powerful meaning-making experience for players, but only if we understand that what makes games fun is also what makes them meaningful. Renowned game designer Sid Meier ("Civilization", "Railroad Tycoon", "Pirates") famously defined a good game as "a series of interesting choices." What makes choices interesting? The same…
Descriptors: Museums, Educational Games, Tests, Selection
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Smith, Andrea Livi – Journal of Museum Education, 2011
The goal of this paper is to express the views from the "outside," from laypeople who want to go to museums, but perhaps find themselves not going very often. Adult visitors to history museums are often treated as either toddlers or sticks-in-the-mud, where they are assumed to break anything they touch, or enjoy didactic lectures. As a result,…
Descriptors: Museums, History, Adults, Interaction
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Eberle, Scott G. – Journal of Museum Education, 2008
In 2006 the Strong Museum in Rochester, New York reopened as the Strong National Museum of Play. Devising a new interpretive plan proved crucial to transforming the institution's mission and decisive in leading toward a $37 million expansion that drove strong gains in attendance. Still, the new interpretive direction, articulated in the museum's…
Descriptors: Strategic Planning, Play, Museums, Experiential Learning
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Hakala, Jim S. H. – Journal of Museum Education, 2008
Ideally, the process and product of interpretive planning is a living document that serves to guide a museum's interpretation proactively. This case study details the development and resulting benefits of the first institution-wide interpretive plan at the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History. Stimulated by internal growth and change,…
Descriptors: Museums, Higher Education, Exhibits, History
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Simon, Roger I. – Journal of Museum Education, 2006
Public history is inherently pedagogical. How it is enacted has implications for civic life now and in the future. A democratic society requires forms of public history beyond those that provide recognition and affirmation of existing identities and values. A museum-based public history is needed that fosters on-going work of repair and…
Descriptors: History, Democracy, Museums, Exhibits
Yellis, Ken, Ed. – Journal of Museum Education: Roundtable Reports, 1985
This issue focuses on the interpretation of built environments, from Washington Irving's 19th century home in Tarrytown, New York, to structures in contemporary Chicago. Barbara Carson, Margaret Piatt, and Renee Friedman discuss the interpretation of interior and exterior spaces and explain how to teach history with objects instead of teaching the…
Descriptors: Architectural Education, Architecture, Built Environment, Educational Facilities