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Hands-on Minds-on Exhibits for Everybody USS Constitution Museum Anne Grimes Rand, Executive Vice President Robert Kiihne, Director of Exhibits USS CONSTITUTION • Active duty commissioned warship • Undefeated in War of 1812 • Guided tours provided by USN sailors • Located on Boston’s Freedom Trail USS Constitution Museum • • • • • Across the dock from “Old Ironsides” Free Admission 300,000+ Visitors / Year Family Audience Mission = memory & educational voice What is the “Sailors Speak” Project? Research • USS Constitution’s enlisted sailors Exhibits • A prototype exhibit to explore hands-on family learning • Ultimately, a social history exhibit for all ages Programs • An interpretive springboard • Building bridges into the community • Museum theater • School programs • Gallery interpretation • Orchestral Outreach Research! 1261 men served on Constitution during the War of 1812. What we want to know: • Who were these people? • Where were they from? • What did they look like? • What was their experience? • What about the rest of their lives? How we know it: • Traditional genealogical resources • Pension applications • Receipts and official correspondence • Navy personnel records What we do with the information when we have it: • Create a comprehensive database that builds on CDR Martin’s • Research informs exhibit and outreach programs • Create engaging ways to share this with the public Sailors Speak: Life Aboard CONSTITUTION in 1812 Experience the life of a sailor on USS CONSTITUTION during the War of 1812, through people, interactive exhibit components, historical quotes, artifacts and hands-on reproductions. A Composite Cruise • Recruiting a Diverse Crew • Joining a Seafaring Community • Forging a Fighting Team • Testing the Crew in Battle • Returning Home Thanks to NEH for funding our exhibit planning! “A Sailor’s Life for Me” A Prototype Exhibit to Encourage Family Learning Goals • Highlight lives of enlisted sailors • Emphasize human perspective • Build links to visitor’s experience • Engage all of the audience Thanks to IMLS for funding our prototype exhibit! The Family Learning Project at the USS Constitution Museum • Study successful models • Prototype exhibit • Extensive formative evaluation • Visitor research • Share results online “Conversation is the currency of family learning." - Minda Borun, Franklin Institute IMLS National Leadership Grant Goals • Study how families learn in unfacilitated galleries in history museums • Encourage family learning through CONVERSATION • Identify low-cost, low-tech interactive elements that can be replicated • Disseminate effective techniques through website “tool kit” What is family learning? What does it look like? Characteristics of Family Learning: • Family learning is playful, fun, and a social experience • Family learning is influenced by the ages of the children and adults in the group • Families all learn in different ways • Families find value in their own personal observations and experiences; they learn by working, talking, and solving problems together - Courtesy of The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis Is Family Learning Right for your Museum? Try this test at home … 10 Steps to Encourage Family Learning at Your Institution Consider the Benefits of Embracing a Family Audience • Expand your audience • Build future museum visitation • See people laughing and learning together • Show visitors that history can be engaging • Perhaps even see the impact in the bottom line! Caution: it can be noisy, messy & very rewarding! The Family Audience A survey of 5500 museum-going families by Reach Advisors Bad News History museums and historic sites are the least popular • 31% visit historic sites • 23% visit history museums Opportunities Age of oldest child determines what museum to visit • When oldest child enters elementary school, history rises Grandparents are 20% more likely than parents to take children to a history museum The Appeal of History • An authentic, hands-on, active experience for families • See, touch, feel and experience it vs. book (just read about it) Exhibit Planning – Thinking Differently What is the Goal? • Tell a compelling story? • Cram as much information in as possible? • Create an enjoyable, informative, social and educational experience? Traditional Exhibit Family Learning Prototype What content is appropriate for a family audience? Themes and topics • Select stories & collections with family appeal • Look for universal themes Tell a good story • Consider emotional trajectory of exhibit • Difficult topics are ok – they prompt conversation Personal connection • Offer interpretive links to the visitor’s experience Universal Themes Sleeping Eating Working Highlight People & Their Stories Developing Exhibits to Engage all Ages How do you compare to the Average Sailor in 1812? How tall are you? How old are you? What color are your eyes? What color is your hair? Are you African American? Do you have any tattoos? Personal connection Offer interpretive links to the visitor’s experience Family Learning is NOT “Dumbing Down” • Try techniques to encourage conversation • Use effective questioning and layering strategies • Create an enjoyable, informative, social and educational experience Family Learning & “A Sailor’s Life for Me?” • Exhibit techniques to engage families • Power of prototypes • Label study – effective questions • Ask the Audience! • Evaluation tools – simple & effective • Programs for all ages • A new strategy • Sharing our story A Sailor’s Life For Me? What is the purpose of the prototype exhibit? •To test interactives with a family audience •To create a research platform •To experiment with exhibit ideas A Sailor’s Life For Me? Designing Exhibits to Engage all Ages PISEC Criteria Multi-sided: family can cluster around exhibit Multi-user: interaction allows for several sets of hands and bodies Accessible: comfortably used by children and adults Multi-outcome: observation and interaction are sufficiently complex to foster group discussion Multi-modal: appeals to different learning styles and levels of knowledge Readable: text is arranged in easily-understood segments Relevant: provides cognitive links to visitor's existing knowledge and experience Learning styles to consider Howard Gardner’s intelligences: 4MAT System •Linguistic •Innovative Learners •Logical-mathematical •Analytic Learners •Musical •Common Sense Learners •Bodily-kinesthetic •Dynamic Learners •Spatial •Interpersonal •Intrapersonal Low Tech The Recruiting Interactive PISEC Qualities • Multi-sided • Multi-user • Accessible • Multi-outcome • Multi-modal • Readable • Relevant • Visitors sit down and ask each other a series of questions • Encourages family conversations & previews exhibit activities • Acts as an “advanced organizer” for the exhibit Evaluating prototypes • Small sample size • Short form • Do visitors understand what to do? • Do visitors learn what you had hoped? More questions! More game like! Let us play a role! Give us a score card! Give us more information! Success! Labels = primary tool for conveying content How to make them engaging? How to encourage family conversations? Prompting Conversation in Galleries – Questions vs. Quotes A Research Study Get on your knees and scrub! One of the things I dislike most about being a sailor is holystoning (scrubbing) the decks each morning day after day. The worst is when it’s cold. We take off our shoes, roll up our pants and get on our hands and knees, add salt water and sand, then scrub…scrub…scrub. (58 words) Historical Quote “The most disagreeable duty in the ship was that of holy-stoning the decks on cold, frosty mornings.” Samuel Leech, 1810 Contemporary Question What is the chore you dread the most? How often do you have to do it? Historical Question Can you imagine being a sailor in 1812 and starting off your day with a cold saltwater scrub rather than a hot shower? You Vote! Which label do you prefer? Historical Quote – “The most disagreeable duty on the ship was that of holy-stoning the decks on cold, frosty mornings.” Samuel Leech, 1810. Contemporary Question – What is the chore you dread the most? How often do you have to do it? Historical Question – Can you imagine being a sailor in 1812 and starting off your day with a cold saltwater scrub rather than a hot shower? What have we learned? Visitor preferences • 47% prefer historical quotations …because they are “real” and “authentic.” • 34 % prefer historical questions …they create a bridge between visitor and content • Most did not like contemporary questions … they didn’t deliver any new information • Males prefer historical quotations 63% • Women prefer historical questions 47% When we observed visitors in exhibit * Visitors engaged in conversation 3x more often with the historic question than with a quotation! 1st or 3rd Person Voice in Labels Get on your knees and scrub! One of the things I dislike most about being a sailor is holystoning (scrubbing) the decks each morning day after day. The worst is when it’s cold. We take off our shoes, roll up our pants and get on our hands and knees, add salt water and sand, then scrub…scrub…scrub. Every morning sailors holystoned (scrubbed) the deck. They took off their shoes, rolled up their pants and then got on their knees and scrubbed with water and sand. Sailors disliked this chore especially when it was cold. Reflections on Labels Visitors said they want: • Accuracy / authenticity • Personal engagement • Connection / relevance • Simplicity & clarity • Stories • Thought provoking questions Reflections on Labels Less is More Label Format we used • 50 words • 1st person voice • Concise & informative • Focus on themes • Larger font size Visitors said • Easier to follow • 2 to 1 visitor preference over traditional labels Layering Information Lift Flaps Multiple Media st person rd 1 3 person “crew ID” label Graphic list Audio “Sailors” Layering Information War and Peace 3500 square foot main gallery Great objects A few interactives And lots of text about 4500 words on the main text panels text A great quote On a large text panel On a wall of text Types of Evaluation •Front End •Formative •Timing & Tracking •Behavioral Coding •Evaluating Prototypes •Summative These can be good projects for volunteers or interns! Visitors spend 7.2 minutes in the War and Peace gallery (3500 sq ft) A Sailor’s Life For Me? Pod tracking and interview Lots of graphic support gives the words meaning One image makes a difference! Exit interviews Developing an exit interview 1. What do you really want to know? 2. Make sure it is short – for both your sake and the sake of your visitor! 3. Revise at least once before trying it out 4. Test you exit interview with staff and then a visitor or two 5. Revise 6. Execute – If you just want a feel 25 interviews is enough, If you want statistics you need 50 or more. The Evolution of the Question If you are a local history museum, don’t ask visitors: What do you want to know about our town’s history? Focus your parameters first and ask: Are you more interested in learning why this town was founded or about some of our early settlers? Or Rank the following topics in order (most to least) of what is most interesting to you. The Evolution of the Question We wanted to know if visitors were being engaged in our gallery programs. We asked visitors: Did the interpreter use a variety of experiences, objects, and ideas to capture your attention? YES NO Explain Did the interpreter provide chances for all ages to participate in the experiences? YES NO Explain Visitors didn’t understand the questions. We reworked it to make it easier to understand: Were you invited to participate in the program by handling replica objects or answering a question? Yes – How so? No Visitors spent and average of 22 minutes in A Sailor’s Life For Me? (2000 sq ft.) ¾ASLFM is smaller than War and Peace – 2000 sq ft vs. 3500 sq ft ¾Significantly more conversations going on in the galleries ¾Visitors are reading labels and getting content ¾Visitors are participating in activities, sampling the daily lives of sailors Object Theatre Goals: • Use primary sources to tell the story of battle on CONSTITUTION • Connect visitors with the emotional experience of sailors in battle • Utilize objects, images, narrative and sound effects to create an affective experience for visitors • Create a balanced look at a difficult subject matter for visitors today (veterans/protesters) Formative Evaluation •What emotions did the presentation evoke in you? •What emotions were expressed by the sailors in the presentation? •What age do you think the presentation is appropriate for? Object Theatre Visitors told us that they... • Understood period language •Discerned there were two different perspectives – American and British. • Keyed into the emotional experience – their own and that of the sailors. • Thought is was appropriate for any age, but that younger visitors might not “get it” Object Theatre Formative Evaluation – Visitors told us that … • They wanted it to be more passionate • They needed clarification of which specific sailor was speaking • It should have more sound effects • The actors needed to be more “animated” • It needed “pace, pitch, and power” Object Theatre Object Theatre Object Theatre Prototype Summative Evaluation •Tracking/Timing •Exit Interviews •Feedback Board Object Theatre Prototype Summative Evaluation – Summer 2006 •“It showed the true brutality and violence of war without showing too much gore! Thanks.” •“Accurate view of the trauma of war. Notable that old sailor said, ‘curse this war.’” •“I’m glad that I’m an American and also glad that I wasn’t alive when it happened. God Bless America.” •“As an active duty sailor, I appreciate what the men before me did.” •“War is an unnecessary waste!” •“This was a wonderful learning experience. Thank you and may God Bless the Navy.” •“This was the best show I have ever seen in my life! Seriously it was way better than Disney.” Object Theatre Prototype Summative Evaluation – Summer 2006 •33% watched the entire show • 20% stayed longer than 8 minutes • 81% said it would encourage conversation within their family • 92.5% realized the script was based on actual words •60% stopped in the theatre but didn’t see entire presentation 24% wrote a message on talkback board 28% read the talkback board Prototype Summative Evaluation How did the actual words of the sailors influence the visitor’s experience? 50 visitors responded that the actual words did impact their experience as follows: Authenticity 41% Better/Good 20% Learned more about battle 12.9% Questioned at end 3.7% Fulfilling experience 1.8% Prototype Summative Evaluation How will the theatre presentation encourage conversations within your family? • “talk about the differences between British might and Americans and gave opinions of both sides” • “how difficult and bloody – will compare to ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’” • “will ask them if it was what they expected” • “didn’t like the phrase ‘only 7 killed …’” • “learned a lot – good history” Object Theatre Follow-up after exit interviews via email: 1. What kinds of feelings did you or those with you have while “experiencing battle” in our theatre? • “You felt like you were watching the battle take place … my 11 year old gasped and my 6 year old said ‘gross’ when the narrator said ‘there were blood, guts, and pieces of brain on the deck …’ they asked to leave the theatre at that point, and we did. We never saw how the film ended.” • “The theatre itself added emotional context to the USS CONSTITUTION, and it obviously made an impact, in that my children had no difficulty answering your questions several weeks after the visit.” Object Theatre Follow-up after exit interviews via email: 2. Did you discuss anything about your battle theatre experience after your visit, either among yourselves or with others? • “We did discuss it after leaving the Museum, and it sparked a very intense conversation about the nature of war and the sacrifices made by the people who fight them.” • “My son asked if that really happened. He still brings up the part about the blood, guts, and pieces of brain.” Object Theatre Follow-up after exit interviews via email: 3. What do you remember most about the Battle Theatre? • “It was comfortable and, for the most part, the presentation was well done and educational. Just a little too graphic for our family.” • “The sound of the cannonballs striking the wood. The British captain talking about all the wounded.” Object Theatre Lessons Learned • It’s okay to use primary source language, just be sure to test for audience comprehension first. • You can take the best primary source quotes (from several different battles) and utilize them to tell an emotional story in a most compelling and affective way. • Length is vitally important to your visitor • Images significantly effect the emotional impact of words. • Visitors have told us that they want their history “authentic” and “genuine.” They also wanted a well told story. It’s possible to find a balance between fact and fiction that curators and educators can agree on. Engaging All Ages & Learning Styles Sailors Speak = Strategic Focus • Research • Exhibits • Family Learning • Programs • • • • • • An interpretive springboard Building bridges into community Museum theater School programs Gallery interpretation Orchestral Outreach Museum Theatre Goals: • Share the experiences of a free Black sailor on Constitution through “his own words” • Connect visitors with the live person of David instead of just a photograph/text • Utilize primary sources as much as possible and fill in the context with historical research Formative Evaluation Visitors told us: • they could recall specific information about David’s life after seeing the play • the play personalized David’s story • the story of an individual helps visitors learn more about the ship • (the actor) “opened up history to us that we didn’t know” • the character was easy to relate to • the play was clear and straight forward Museum Theatre Summer 2006 Lessons Learned • One primary source is enough • Gray area where facts end and historical context fills in the story • Okay to make-up dialogue for a theatrical presentation, but be sure to cite it and base it in historical research • Stepping out of character is a good time to tell visitors what we do and do not know from primary sources Museum Theatre Sailors’ Lives & Sailors’ Wives Summer 2007 Dorothea Cooper • Married to William Cooper, an Indian • Married at Poospatuck by itinerant minister Paul • William died in JAVA battle; Dorothea left with two young girls Summer 2007 120 performances reach 5,331 visitors Thanks to the Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities Visitor Response “This is one of the most creative, engaging museum displays I‘ve ever seen. We’re from New York!” A middle school student commented, “I paid attention here, but not in school.” “This may well be the finest military museum in the world.” “Hearing the voices of CONSTITUTION’s past made CONSTITUTION’s history come alive” Said while filling out a Family Membership, “We’re retired Federal Workers who have crisscrossed the country and never seen another museum done as well as you have.” Visitor Response 7 minutes / family = old 22 minutes / family = new 3x longer in new exhibit 54% Increase in Voluntary Donations 2005: 37 cents / visitor 2007: 57 cents / visitor 15% Visitation Increase 2005 = $74,328 2007 = $131,665 A New Strategy at the USS Constitution Museum The Museum will provide a hands-on minds-on environment where inter-generational groups seeking an enjoyable, educational experience can have fun and learn as they explore history together. David’s Story A great story! • Featured in exhibit (Boy = Rank) • One man show (Mystery) • Presented by High School Interns to Boston Summer Campers • School program & outreach program for younger visitors • Collaborative project with Boston Landmarks Orchestra Boston Landmarks Orchestra “David & Old Ironsides” Conductor: Charles Ansbacher Narrator: Rev. Ray Hammond Family Learning Project Goals • Encourage family learning through CONVERSATION • Identify low-cost, low-tech interactive elements Steal this Idea! • Recruiting interactive • Conclusion game • Disseminate effective techniques Tools Shared • PISEC worksheet • Evaluation exercises • Learning styles matrix • 10 Steps to Encourage Family Learning www.familylearningforum.org • Exhibit planning tools • Engaging label ideas • Simple hands-on interactives • Asking your audience for help + 10 steps to get started with family learning! Share Successes! Where do visitors laugh and learn together at your museum?