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REVEAL - Responsive Museum Facilitation: A Video-Based Reflection Guide for Engaging with Families at Interactive Exhibits

February 1, 2017 | Professional Development, Conferences, and Networks

Museums, science centers, and other informal education institutions offer powerful engagement and learning experiences for children and adults of all ages. Staff facilitators, such as museum educators or docents, play an important role in these settings and can enhance and deepen visitors’ interactions at exhibits and during programs. By effectively balancing the exploration of educational content with sensitivity to the needs and desires of visitors, facilitators create personalized interactions with the potential to impact visitors long after the experience is over. Despite their important role, however, it’s rare for staff to have the opportunity to watch other facilitators in action, learn about and practice new facilitation strategies, or discuss their practice with peers and colleagues. Even rarer are quality, sustained, research-based professional development resources to help these individuals reflect on their work and improve their practice.

The video-based professional development program presented in this guide is intended to help fill this gap and provide a catalyst for staff facilitators in museums, science centers, and other informal learning environments to discuss, reflect on, and improve their educational practices in conversation with their colleagues. The materials were developed as part of the REVEAL project, which studied the work of facilitators interacting with families at interactive exhibits in a science center (see Introductory Session Handout 1, “Provoking Reflection”). While other professional development (PD) projects have focused on more formal programs, such as stage demonstrations or classes for school groups, this professional development resource centers on informal, conversational interactions between staff and visitors. In addition to being a common way that staff members engage with visitors, we believe these types of unscripted interactions offer unique opportunities for educators to capitalize on the characteristics of informal learning and enrich visitor experiences while still allowing families to pursue their own goals and priorities.

TEAM MEMBERS

  • Elizabeth Andanen
    Author
    Oregon Museum of Science and Industry
  • 2013 05 24 Brazil July 2006 me no graph
    Author
    TERC Inc.
  • 2013 06 21 IMG 0768
    Author
    Oregon Museum of Science and Industry
  • IVEL
    Author
    Oregon Museum of Science and Industry
  • Crosby Bromley
    Author
  • Citation

    Funders

    NSF
    Funding Program: AISL
    Award Number: 1321666
    Resource Type: Reference Materials
    Discipline: General STEM
    Audience: Families | Museum/ISE Professionals
    Environment Type: Professional Development, Conferences, and Networks | Professional Development and Workshops

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