社论

IF 1.6 Q3 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM
Steven R. Guberman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期包含四份研究和评估报告、两份方法论综述和一份书评。这些文章解决了游客研究领域持续存在的问题,并在该杂志先前发表的三个领域的出版物的基础上:(a)研究方法,特别是关于高效和准确的数据收集的问题(例如,参见Moussori和Roussos,2013;Rainbolt Nurse、Benfield和Loomis,2012;Schautz、van Dijk和Meisert,2016)以及我们的方法对访客的影响(例如,Pattison和Shagott,2015);(b) 博物馆游客对摄影的使用(例如,Vartiainen和Enkenberg,2014);以及(c)提高学校到非正规教育组织实地考察的教育价值的策略(例如,Aerila,Rönkkö,&Gronman,2016;Pecore、Kirchgessner、Demetrikopoulos、Carruth和Frantz,2017)。这个问题源于Theopisti Stylianou Lambert的一份研究报告,她在报告中调查了游客对在美术馆拍照的态度。她指出,博物馆专业人士对游客摄影的价值意见不一——它是增强还是削弱了游客的体验--以及博物馆是否应该禁止或鼓励游客使用摄影。通过对博物馆游客的深入采访,她发现了游客拍照的共同动机以及其他游客不拍照的原因。特别感兴趣的是那些拍照但认为这样做对博物馆体验有害的游客。Scott A.Pattison、Scott M.Randol、Marcie Benne、Andee Rubin、Ivel Gontan、Elizabeth Andanen、Crosby Bromley、Smirla Ramos Montañez和Lynn D.Dierking描述了一个基于设计的研究项目,他们在该项目中考察了经验丰富的博物馆工作人员如何促进家庭学习。该研究使用了基于设计的研究技术,包括理论化、数据收集和反思的迭代循环。作者开发了一个由三个因素组成的模型,用于理解展品中的非结构化员工便利化,旨在促进代数思维:(a)访客与展品互动的预期结果(包括访客满意度、数学推理和代际沟通),(b)工作人员的便利策略(如引导游客参观展览并提供解释),以及(c)影响因素(工作人员、游客的特征以及影响工作人员与家人互动方式的环境,如家庭成员的数量和年龄)。基于设计的研究过程和促进技术的发现都应该引起各种环境中从业者的兴趣。Nils Petter Hauan和Jennifer DeWitt提出了一个对许多教育研究人员和博物馆从业者非常重要的问题:如何改善学生在科学博物馆实地考察中的学习体验。在他们的研究中,他们将11至13岁的学生分为小组,在挪威科学中心探索选定的展品。每组被要求遵循四份专门准备的讲义中的一份:一份开放探索版,鼓励学生使用展品并发现他们所展示的科学概念;一份传统讲义,其中包含展品的照片和科学的关键信息;以及两个版本(一个在纸上,一个以数字形式呈现)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial
This issue contains four research and evaluation reports, two methodology reviews, and one book review. The articles address ongoing concerns in the visitor studies field and build on prior publications from the journal in three areas: (a) research methodologies, especially issues around efficient and accurate data collection (see, e.g., Moussouri & Roussos, 2013; Rainbolt Nurse, Benfield, & Loomis, 2012; Schautz, van Dijk, & Meisert, 2016) and the impact of our methods on visitors (e.g., Pattison & Shagott, 2015); (b) the use of photography by museum visitors (e.g., Vartiainen & Enkenberg, 2014); and (c) strategies for enhancing the educational value of school field trips to informal educational organizations (e.g., Aerila, Rönkkö, & Gronman, 2016; Pecore, Kirchgessner, Demetrikopoulos, Carruth, & Frantz, 2017). The issue beginswith a research report byTheopisti Stylianou-Lambert inwhich she examines visitors’ attitudes about taking photographs in art museums. She notes that museum professionals disagree about the value of visitor photography—does it enhance or detract from the visitor experience?—and whether museums should prohibit or encourage visitors to use photography. Through in-depth interviews with museum visitors, she uncovered common motivations of visitors who take photos and the reasons other visitors do not. Of special interest are visitors who take photographs but believe that doing so is harmful to themuseum experience. Scott A. Pattison, Scott M. Randol, Marcie Benne, Andee Rubin, Ivel Gontan, Elizabeth Andanen, Crosby Bromley, Smirla Ramos-Montañez, and Lynn D. Dierking describe a design-based research project in which they examined how experienced museum staff members facilitate learning for families. The study uses design-based research techniques comprised of iterative cycles of theorizing, data collection, and reflection. The authors developed amodel composed of three factors for understanding unstructured staff facilitation at exhibits designed to promote algebraic thinking: (a) the desired outcomes for visitors’ interactions with the exhibits (including visitor satisfaction, mathematical reasoning, and intergenerational communication), (b) staff facilitation strategies (such as orienting visitors to an exhibit and providing explanations), and (c) influencing factors (characteristics of staff, visitors, and the environment that influenced how staffmembers interactedwith families, such as the number and ages of members in family groups). Both the design-based research process and the findings about facilitation techniques should be of interest to practitioners in a variety of settings. Nils Petter Hauan and Jennifer DeWitt address an issue of great importance to many educational researchers and museum practitioners: How to improve the learning experience of students on field trips to science museums. In their study, they assigned 11to 13-year-old students to small, self-directed groups as they explored select exhibits in a Norwegian science center. Each groupwas asked to followone of four specially prepared handouts: an open exploration version that encouraged students to use the exhibits and discover the science concepts they illustrate, a traditional handout with photos of the exhibits and key information about the science embedded in them, and two versions (one on paper and one presented digitally)
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来源期刊
Visitor Studies
Visitor Studies HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
13.30%
发文量
9
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