How can we begin to chart a course toward a future for science museums in which we maintain our status as sources of trusted information, while also fulfilling our potential as sites of genuine participation and social interaction? In 2019, with funding from the National Science Foundation, the New York Hall of Science hosted a three day conference to discuss new and equitable approaches to exhibit design. With leading exhibit designers, educators, researchers, and community engagement specialists, we began to rethink the exhibit design process, toward a goal of helping our museums become more inclusive and equitable for all visitors, and to increase opportunities for visitors to express their agency as scientific learners and doers. We discussed what equity, inclusivity, and agency look like for visitors to our institutions; practiced redesigning exhibits with these ideas in mind; and reflected on how our own experiences and identities influence our work in museums. Through this process, we came to an important realization — we need to keep talking. We need to keep having contextspecific conversations about how our individual institutions can better serve our visitors’ diverse needs; how to make their perspectives central to their experiences with museum exhibits; and how to foster institutional cultures that value those experiences. To help others have those conversations, we created this guide.
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