- Feb 2016
-
www.wpi.edu www.wpi.edu
-
it is not art itself that people are turning from. People are turning away “from the traditional delivery mechanisms” (Cohen, 2013)
-
- Feb 2015
-
www.randikorn.com www.randikorn.com
-
identifying one primary audience
RK&A says doomed for failure if try to focus on too many communities at once. Choose one primary audience (probably the highest need), and build intended impact/programming/marketing/etc. around them.
-
Faculty members have the capacity to create their own meaning and feel comfortable and enjoy making sense of the thematic arrangement of objects. Students, on the other hand, usually sought out interpretive devices, like text labels, for an explanation of how they were “supposed to feel.” Further, students did not perceive the thematic organization of the works of art as the interpretive device, whereas faculty did. While most faculty used the text labels to reinforce their own thinking and reassure them they were on the right track, most students used the text labels as their entry point to understanding and experiencing the exhibition.
-
Faculty and students had distinctly different experiences
-
RK&A believes that successful exhibitions result when staff acknowledges the perspectives, perceptions, and knowledge of their target audience.
this should apply to all types of exhibitions
-
-
www.randikorn.com www.randikorn.com
-
There are two essential building blocks to creating a success project: 1) selecting an audience; and 2) articulating clear outcomes.
-
-
www.randikorn.com www.randikorn.com
-
we promote the lifecycle approach to exhibition evaluation because we know that when evaluation procedures are built into an exhibition’s lifecycle
RK&A types of eval: front-end evaluation (after concept-development but before design develops), formative evaluation (evaluating prototypes), remedial evaluation (post-installation/troubleshooting), summative evaluation (at end of everything)
-
-
www.randikorn.com www.randikorn.com
-
The presence of volunteers further added to visitors’ experiences as volunteers’ presence encouraged visitors to ask questions, look for hints when appropriate, and learn about the mathematical principles behind the exhibits.
Value of volunteers / peers as POC's in the space. Works for dedicated galleries/museums, but not so sure for libraries. Spatial differences - people not coming to library as a "destination." Possibly helping text/hands-on technology and automated feedback channels more useful for our case.
-
inviting and amusing nature of the exhibition, designed to be interactive, entertaining, provocative, and challenging all at the same time
Challenging/less "popular" topics (i.e. math in this case) benefit from simpler exhibitions that still address the challenge, but make it interactive/entertaining
-
follow-up telephone interviews with visitors one month after each festival date in order to identify how visitors’ ideas about math change over time.
follow-up interviews to measure impact/changing perceptions over time
-
onsite interviews with visitors
-
RK&A explored the ways in which science festival visitors used the MM2GO exhibition and how the exhibition affected visitors’ ideas and attitudes about mathematics.
-