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Beyond Aha Motivating Museum Visitors

The article discusses the importance of creating motivating experiences for museum visitors, particularly in science museums, by focusing on the process of science rather than merely presenting established facts. It emphasizes the concept of 'flow' as a key to enhancing visitor engagement and satisfaction, advocating for open-ended discovery opportunities that allow for personal insights. The author argues that by redefining the goals of exhibits to facilitate understanding of how science works, museums can provide more enriching experiences for their visitors.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
42 views3 pages

Beyond Aha Motivating Museum Visitors

The article discusses the importance of creating motivating experiences for museum visitors, particularly in science museums, by focusing on the process of science rather than merely presenting established facts. It emphasizes the concept of 'flow' as a key to enhancing visitor engagement and satisfaction, advocating for open-ended discovery opportunities that allow for personal insights. The author argues that by redefining the goals of exhibits to facilitate understanding of how science works, museums can provide more enriching experiences for their visitors.
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Maney Publishing

Beyond "Aha!": Motivating Museum Visitors


Author(s): Marlene Chambers
Source: The Journal of Museum Education, Vol. 14, No. 3, Common Agendas (Fall, 1989), pp. 14-
15
Published by: Maney Publishing
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flow:(1) thetasksmustbe equal to one's presentabilityto
WhatResearchSaysaboutLearningin perform,(2) attentionmust be centeredon a limited
ScienceMuseums stimulusfield,and (3) usually,theexperiencemustcontain
"coherent,noncontradictory demands for action and
Amongtherewards

Beyond"Aha!":
provideclear,unambiguousfeedback."
ofa flowexperiencearea senseofbeingfreedfromnormal
cares,a sense of being competentand in controlof the
Museum
Motivating
situation,a sense of discovery,and a sense of personal
enrichment.

Visitors Obviously,museum-going is a freelychosen activity,


withno otherrewardthantheactivityitself.Ifwe regard
experiencesin museumsas varieties offlowexperience, we
MarleneChambers gain a keyto creatingconditionsthatmake themmore
rewarding.5 By offering challengesequal to the novice's
current skills,we can facilitate discoveries thatsharein the
natureoftheexpert'sflowexperience.6
Whatkindofexperienceisuniquelyavailablein science
museumsthatparallelsthe estheticexperienceartmuse-
ums offer?As a scienceamateur,I thinkthismustbe the
experienceoftheprocessofscience.Yet,byrigidly control-
THE "AHA!"EXPERIENCESMANY SCIENCE MUSEUMS
ling the outcome of its "discovery" activities,the science
now offervisitorsresembletraditionalscienceeducation
museumreallyoffers visitors demonstrations calculatedto
demonstrations thatare drivenby the information they - illustrated
purportto teach, ratherthan by visitors7motivational "prove"established factsorprinciples examples
of what one should know ratherthan opportunities to
needs. Researchthathas led to a new experience-driven
explore what science is or how itworks.7 As long as science
interpretivemodel forartmuseumsmayalso have some-
fruitful
to sayto sciencemuseums. museumscontinueto tietheir"aha!" experiencesdirectly
thing to teachingspecificfactsor principles, theirexhibitswill
In 1986,MeloraMcDermottundertookresearchat the
DenverArtMuseumto identify the natureof artnovices' remaininformation driven,not experiencedriven.
estheticexperiencesso we couldunderstandhow thesere- Aninherent, indispensable componentoftheprocessof
sembledand differed fromthoseofexperts.1 scienceis the "clinker"fact,information thatcannotbe
Byanalyzing basedon current
novices'perceptions oftheirartexperiences,
we identified explainedbyhypothesis acceptedtheory.
skillsandattitudes ThomasKuhn'sviewof scientific revolutions emphasizes
theyneedtodevelopiftheirexperiences theroleofsuchanomalies- "violationsofexpectations" -
withartobjectsareto be enriched.McDermott'sstudyhas
allowedus to takenovices'preconceptions in creatingcrisesthatlead to newperspectives.8 Failuresof
and preferences
about art into account as we develop experience-driven expectation,withthe opportunities theypresentfornew
materials.2 conjectureand refutation, seemto be centraltothekindof
interpretive
experiencea sciencemuseumcouldoffer itsvisitors.To set
up an "aha!" experience in which there is only one right
"Scienceis a methodfortesting
claims answeris to betraytheprocessofscience.Surelyvisitors to
a sciencemuseumdeserveto confrontexhibitsthathelp
about thenaturalworld,notan themactuallyexperiencethe forceof one of StephenJay
immutablecompendium ofabsolute Gould'srecurring themes:"Scienceis a methodfortesting
truths/' claimsaboutthenaturalworld,notan immutable compen-
diumof absolutetruths."9
Ourunderstanding ofthekindofexperiencewewantto If science museumswere to definethe goal of their
exhibitsand interpretive devicesas facilitating a specifi-
promoteand the conditionsnecessaryto promoteit has "how science works" as a
also been guidedby the esthetictheoriesof philosopher cally discovery varietyof the
MonroeBeardsley3 and by an intrinsic-motivationmodel scienceexpert'sflowexperience, theselectionofinforma-
based on the researchof behavioralpsychologistMihaly tionalcontentwouldbe at once easierand morerigorous.
Information offered ina scienceexhibitwouldhavetopass
Csikszentmihalyi. Lookingforthe rootsof motivation, the testof contributing to the visitor'sexperienceof the
Csikszentmihalyi examinedthe way expertsin intrinsi-
way science works. Such information could be used to
cally rewardingactivitieslike rock climbingand chess
describetheirexperiences.4He foundthatthe experience suggestproblemsoroffer cluesto theirresolution.Itcould
of "flow"- a termtheseexpertsfrequently use to describe be the"clinker"thatdemandsa reexamination ofconclu-
"the deep involvementand effortless sionsor theories.But,above all, it would not itselfbe the
progression"they
feelwhenan activitygoeswell- is whatmotivatesthemto goal ofthatexperience.
One of the dangersI have foundin settingup esthetic
spendtimedoingsomethingthathas no rewardotherthan
theact itself. discovery experiencesin an artmuseumis thetendencyto
want to controlthe specificcontentof the discovery
Csikszentmihalyisinglesoutthreeconditionscriticalto visitorsmake- a quite normal desire for anyone in a
teachingrole.It is difficult to pointthewayto a challenge
open-endedenough to be met by a wide rangeof skill
Marlene Chambers is publications directorat the Denver Art levels- one thatallowsfora variety ofdiscoveries. Butitis
Museum. even moredifficult to remember thattheultimategoal of

14 / Journal
ofMuseumEducation

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providinga discoveryopportunity is to givethe visitora
flowexperience: a senseofbeingcompetentand in control
and a chanceto findnew,personally insightsin
significant
theactivity.
After all,thesefeelings - notthe
ofsatisfaction
informationlearned - motivaterepeat experienceand
continuedlearning.

ResourcePeople
MarleneChambersand Melora McDermott,DenverArt
Museum,Denver,Colorado

Notes
1. Melora McDermott, "Through Their Eyes: What Novices
Value in ArtExperiences,"in Annual MeetingProgramSourcebook
(Washington, D.C.: American Association of Museums, 1988),
pp. 133-62.

2. Marlene Chambers, "Improving the Esthetic Experience for


ArtNovices: A New Paradigm forInterpretiveLabels," in ibid.,
pp. 213-27; Chambers, "To Create Discovery/' Museum News
68, no. 3 (May/June1989): 41-44.

3. Monroe C. Beardsley,The EstheticPointof View,ed. Michael


J. Wreen and Donald M. Callen (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell Univer-
sityPress, 1982).

4. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi,BeyondBoredomand Anxiety:The


ExperienceofPlay in Workand Games (San Francisco:Jossey-
Bass, 1975).

5. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi,Rick E. Robinson et al., "The Artof


Seeing: Toward an InterpretivePsychologyof the Visual Experi-
ence," unpublished research report,J. Paul Getty Foundation,
July1986; Chambers, "To Create Discovery."

6. Chambers, "Improving the Esthetic Experience."

7. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi,"Human Behavior and the Science


Center," in ScienceLearningin theInformalSetting,ed. Paul G.
Heltne and Linda A. Marquardt (Chicago: Chicago Academy of
Sciences, 1988), pp. 79-87.

ofScientificRevolutions,2d ed.
8. Thomas S. Kuhn, The Structure
(Chicago: Universityof Chicago Press, 1970).

9. Stephen JayGould, "An Essay on a Pig Roast," NaturalHis-


tory98 (January1989): 60.

This article is the second in a 10-partseries published by the


Association of Science-Technology Centers (ASTC) and funded
by the Instituteof Museum Services. ASTC is disseminat-
ing the articlesin collaboration with the Museum Education
Roundtable, the International Association of Educators, the
Association of Youth Museums, the International Laboratory
forVisitorStudies, and the American Association of Botani-
cal Gardens and Arboreta.Coordinating editor forthe series is
BeverlySerrell.Single copies of the articlesare available for
$1 each fromASTC, 1413 K St., NW, Tenth Floor, Washington,
D.C. 20005.

Volume14, Number3 Fall 1989 / 15

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