Research Informing the Practice of Museum Educators

Diverse Audiences, Challenging Topics, and Reflective Praxis

Museums are institutions of both education and learning in service of society, that is, they are sites where educational experiences are designed and facilitated, and also places where visitors learn in broad and diverse ways. As such, the role of public education in museums today is highly important, if not at the centre of museum activity.

As museums contemplate the growing significance of their educational roles and mandate within a changing society, so too they are increasingly in need of information about the audiences they serve and their own professional practice as they strive to achieve their educational missions in service to the communities in which they are embedded.

Accordingly, this edited book focuses on informing, broadening and enhancing the pedagogy of museum education and the practices of museum educators. The chapters in this book report independent research studies conducted by the authors who have explored and investigated a variety of issues affecting museum education practice, contextualized across a range of institutions, including art galleries, natural and social history museums, anthropology museums, science centres, and gardens.
These studies address a cross-section of contemporary issues confronting the field of museum education including studies of diverse audiences and their needs, the mediation of challenging topics, professional training, teaching and learning in informal settings, and reflective practice and praxis. Together these themes represent a set of topical issues germane to informing, broadening and enhancing educational practices in diverse museum settings, and will be of considerable interest to a broad spectrum of the museum and non-formal education fields.

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Introduction
Museum Educators Supporting Diverse Audiences: Parents, Teenagers and Family Groups
Pages: 1–4
Home Educators’ Views of Museums
Challenges and Opportunities of Supporting Non-Traditional Learning
Pages: 5–21
On Our Own
Family Experiences in Art Museums Outside of Facilitated Programming
Pages: 23–42
Sparks of Learning
Insights from an After-School Science Museum Program for Teenagers
Pages: 57–75
Introduction
Museum Educators Practice: Challenging Topics and Unique Audiences
Pages: 77–80
Navigating Sensitive Topics with Children
An Inquiry of Museum Educators Facilitating Conversations about Death with Children
Pages: 81–95
Museums and Marginalized Historical Narratives
Learning the Truth about Indian Residential Schools at the UBC Museum of Anthropology
Pages: 115–129
Introduction
Museum Educators’ Praxis: Learning through Ones’ Own Reflexive Research
Pages: 161–163
Representing Other
Finding Reflections of Myself from a Space In-Between a Garden and a Museum
Pages: 165–181
Using Informal Learning Spaces to Increase Meaning-Making
Museum Visits with Young Adults
Pages: 183–200
Embodied Tensions
Digging into Agriculture at the BC Farm Museum
Pages: 201–213
Ecologies of Youth Art Apprenticeship
A Case Study of the Burnaby Art Gallery’s Artist Apprenticeship Project
Pages: 215–230
Creating Meaningful Experiences in Art Museums
A Study of Museum Educators’ Perceptions of Meaningful Engagement with Works of Art
Pages: 231–245
Index
Pages: 251–256
Educational Researchers and their students
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