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Showing 16 to 30 of 160 results
Wickens, K. Allison – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
This case study of "Listen, Look, & Do," a multi-visit preschool program at the Smithsonian's National Postal Museum, provides a model for how other history museums can program for young learners in their neighborhoods. In striving to meet local community audience needs identified by annual evaluations, staff created a program that shifted its…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Museums, Nonschool Educational Programs, Community Needs
Trainer, Laureen; Steele-Inama, Marley; Christopher, Amber – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
In his book, "Identity and the Museum Visitor Experience," John Falk makes the case that by understanding the underlying motivations that drive a visitor, a museum can create an experience that reflects a person's identity and therefore satisfy their motivation for visiting. According to Falk, this level of personal connection increases…
Descriptors: Museums, Recreational Facilities, Cultural Centers, Identification
Dodek, Wendy L. – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
Learning occurs in myriad ways yet most art museums remain wedded to visual instruction. Adult visitors touring the galleries are offered audio guides or lecture style tours to complement the visual but are there other ways to enhance learning? This article reports on a case study that found that active, multi-sensory experiences in art museums…
Descriptors: Arts Centers, Museums, Sensory Experience, Adult Education
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
Adams, Marianna – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
This article addresses the ways in which museum practice has grown or shifted in the ways it thinks about, implements, and uses visitor research. A brief overview of the role of government policies, funders, and theorists and thinkers in the field of museum practice provides a background upon which current practitioners think about the role and…
Descriptors: Museums, Program Evaluation, Change, Research
Angus, Jim – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
Technological innovation is sweeping the world into an unimaginable future. These forces are affecting all aspects of how people live and work. What will be the role of museums and museum educators in this future? This article surveys some of the technologies that have profoundly affected museums and museum education and poses some questions: what…
Descriptors: Museums, Nonschool Educational Programs, Innovation, Technological Advancement
Garcia, Ben – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
It is time to revisit the way we describe and advocate for the "learning power" of museums. Museum learning is unique, multi-faceted and inspires higher-order affective and cognitive development. Yet, when museums describe their educational impact to stakeholders, it is often described narrowly, using the measures of formal education rather than…
Descriptors: Museums, Learning, Nonschool Educational Programs, Informal Education
Yellis, Ken – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
The increasingly sophisticated field of visitor studies, audience research, and evaluation, the growing professionalism of museum education training and practice, and the advocacy role of "Journal of Museum Education" and other publications has transformed the museum landscape. So, too, have dramatic changes in technology and in the larger…
Descriptors: Museums, Nonschool Educational Programs, Change, Empowerment
Thistle, Paul C. – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
Museums offering archaeological programs often attempt to use the "sandbox approach" to simulate archaeological excavation work. However, in light of the definition of simulation, and given the realities of actual professional practice in archaeological excavation, the author argues that the activity of troweling for artifacts in loose sand places…
Descriptors: Museums, Archaeology, Simulation, Nonschool Educational Programs
Herman, Alicia – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
"Bring Your Baby to the Danforth Museum of Art" is a program for mothers. Unlike other museum programs that focus on the needs of children, Bring Your Baby caters to the intellectual interests of the adult parent. Parents learn about artworks, play with babies in a beautiful environment, and socialize with other families. The program is a joyful…
Descriptors: Art Education, Museums, Arts Centers, Mothers
Wetterlund, Kris – Journal of Museum Education, 2012
In the last part of 2011, conversations swirled around the Internet and print about the assault on museum authority. The Marcus Institute for Digital Education in the Arts (MIDEA) summarized some of the discussion in their blog entry "The Participatory Museum and a New Authority." Other sites joined in the discussion, for example, the Museum Geek…
Descriptors: Museums, Nonschool Educational Programs, Power Structure, Definitions
Sully, Perian – Journal of Museum Education, 2011
This article discusses a vault-to-virtual overview of how collections information datasets are formed and how they provide opportunities for museum educators to incorporate rich collections content into their programming. By promoting understanding of the processes involved, the author hopes to encourage partnerships between collections and…
Descriptors: Museums, Nonschool Educational Programs, Data, Cooperation
O'Leary, Lynda – Journal of Museum Education, 2011
In 1995 the Philadelphia Museum of Art's Education Department embarked on an experiment to see how videoconferencing technology could benefit educational programming. Since then it has blossomed into a robust full-time program that has become an important asset to both the Education Department and the museum as a whole. This article describes the…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Museums, Videoconferencing, Nonschool Educational Programs
Levine, Alan – Journal of Museum Education, 2011
Recognized as one of our oldest yet still vital forms of communication, storytelling offers new opportunity when it takes place on the web. Even our every day activities of writing email, creating presentations, or participating in social media can become more dynamic when considered stories. A digital storyteller from outside the museum field…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Museums, Internet, Web 2.0 Technologies
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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