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Paris: AMCSTI/Infos printemps
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A critique of the prevailing "deficit model" of the public's understanding of science can be found in D. A. Wake and J. Bradburne, Fields of Knowledge (Paris: AMCSTI/Infos printemps, 1993).
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(1993)
Fields of Knowledge
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Wake, D.A.1
Bradburne, J.2
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4
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0041344348
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Paradox Lost: Rediscovering Scientific Creativity
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Many science center professionals might argue that hands-on exhibits are, by definition, "bottom-up" and user-driven. This contention is explicitly challenged in D. A. Wake and J. Bradburne, "Paradox Lost: Rediscovering Scientific Creativity," Alliage, no. 6 (1990): 17-24.
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(1990)
Alliage
, Issue.6
, pp. 17-24
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Wake, D.A.1
Bradburne, J.2
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0041344345
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Priming the Pump: Building a Science Network in Alberta
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ed. M. Demazure Paris: Palais de la Découverte
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Described in D. A. Wake and J. Bradburne, "Priming the Pump: Building a Science Network in Alberta," in La science en scène, ed. M. Demazure (Paris: Palais de la Découverte, 1993), 347-356.
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(1993)
La Science en Scène
, pp. 347-356
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Wake, D.A.1
Bradburne, J.2
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Au-delà de l'oeil nu
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Described in D. A. Wake and J. Bradburne, "Au-delà de l'oeil nu," Alliage, no. 15 (1993): 91-98.
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(1993)
Alliage
, Issue.15
, pp. 91-98
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Wake, D.A.1
Bradburne, J.2
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0042983580
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The Science Center Movement
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January
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The planners of newMetropolis would have a great deal of difficulty accepting the statement made by Beetlestone et al. that "Most visitors are intimidated by science. That's why science centers exist. Yet everything in a science center is, by definition, scientific"; see J. G. Beetlestone et al., "The Science Center Movement," Public Understanding of Science 7, no. 1 (January 1998): 5-26, on p. 8.
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(1998)
Public Understanding of Science
, vol.7
, Issue.1
, pp. 5-26
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Beetlestone, J.G.1
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85034187595
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note
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An evaluation of the pilot phase of a hands-on science center in the United Kingdom, conducted by a leading university research center in April 1988, was critical of the project on several grounds, but particularly for fragmenting and decontextualizing scientific subject matter. It provided some advice: "It might well be the case the developers will wish to be more selective of content in the future, as the public's response and the effectiveness of various types of experience are better understood. . . . For example, under the umbrella of science and technology are included experiences involving obvious scientific principles, less obvious technological applications, examples of measuring techniques, visual illusions, spatial problems etc. All these experiences might well be fascinating and capable of arousing curiosity. Their effectiveness in supporting the exhibition objectives is not always self-evident. One of the difficulties of presenting a range of experiences to the public in a context such as [the science center] is that there is no obvious linking concept to help people make sense of their experiences. Without such a strong background context, there is a danger of the experience becoming fragmentary, and consequently trivialised."
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master's thesis, University of Amsterdam, Department of Science Dynamics
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For a thorough and detailed discussion of the relationship of science studies to the science center, and of the science center's relationship to science, see B. Regeer, "Two Paradoxes and a Triangle: The Public Understanding of Science Exhibited" (master's thesis, University of Amsterdam, Department of Science Dynamics, 1996).
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(1996)
Two Paradoxes and a Triangle: The Public Understanding of Science Exhibited
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Regeer, B.1
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13
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26244463697
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Fall/Winter
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The effectiveness of hands-on exhibits in terms of learning, and the response that they are intended to trigger, rather than communicate, is made clear in the evaluation cited in note 10: "As might well have been predicted, the sample visitor responses also indicate that in one or two exhibits, including some of the more popular ones - "Bernoulli Table," for example - there was little understanding of the scientific principle which explains the phenomenon presented. This is not to suggest that there should or could have been understanding. . . . For example, in some cases, visitors were provided with useful intuitive experiences which they could not be expected to describe or understand, but which might provide under-pinning experiences supporting later understanding." The increasing importance of constructivism in the science center debate in recent years, championed by planners such as George Hein, has called many of these approaches into question. Moreover, debate in the related fields of the public understanding of science, science dynamics, and the sociology of science have focused on the inadequacy of the traditional institutional approaches. Despite these critiques, many institutions remain committed to the traditional hands-on approach pioneered in the late 1960s, based on an implicit reception theory and an unreflectively realist position. See the articles in Visitor Behavior 12, nos. 3 and 4 (Fall/Winter 1997).
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(1997)
Visitor Behavior
, vol.12
, Issue.3-4
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Jan/Feb
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A report on the closure of the Columbus Center's Hall of Exploration due to inadequate visitor numbers (it attracted only 70,000 instead of the projected 280,000) can be found in the ASTC Newsletter 26, no. 1 (Jan/Feb 1998): 1.
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(1998)
ASTC Newsletter
, vol.26
, Issue.1
, pp. 1
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cited in note 9
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ASTC reports that in 1990-1996, 86 new science centers opened, more than in the entire previous decade; see Yearbook of Science Center Statistics (cited in note 9).
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Yearbook of Science Center Statistics
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Netherlands Institut voor Nijverheid en Teckniek (NINT, immediate predecessor to newMetropolis), annual report, 1984.
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(1984)
Annual Report
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NINT, mission statement, 1979
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NINT, mission statement, 1979.
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Statement made in a lecture The Science Museum, London, April 11
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Statement made in a lecture at conference on the Public Understanding of Science, The Science Museum, London, April 11, 1990.
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(1990)
Conference on the Public Understanding of Science
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note
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The mission of the science center to "beguile" the visitor into engaging with science (in the words of former Techniquest director John Beetlestone) can be seen in the Techniquest mission statement, where the goal of the exhibitions is "to engage, to amuse, and to engender a sense of fun in the exploration and understanding of the world around us." Techniquest, mission statement, 1988.
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About Misunderstandings about Misunderstandings
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Personal communication; see also J.-M. Lévy-Leblond, "About Misunderstandings about Misunderstandings," Public Understanding of Science 1 (1992): 17-22.
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(1992)
Public Understanding of Science
, vol.1
, pp. 17-22
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Lévy-Leblond, J.-M.1
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"The reason for writing [the Discourse] has been primarily to develop a vision to guide our development. For we truly believe that we cannot simply build a Science Center without having reflected as thoroughly as possible on what role this new center should and could play in our present and future society. Science centers and museums alike have always been children of their time and this infant of ours should be able to participate in societal life for as long as possible." Douma, Prototyping for the 21st Century.
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Prototyping for the 21st Century
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Douma1
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note
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The draft framework document was presented in Fall 1997, and is to be published in Fall 1998.
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Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press
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See K. Hudson, A Social History of Museums (Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press, 1975)
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(1975)
A Social History of Museums
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Hudson, K.1
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Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
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K. Hudson, Museums of Influence (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987).
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(1987)
Museums of Influence
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Hudson, K.1
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note
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In the evaluation cited in note 10 above, data show that the average mean time spent with the exhibits was 50 seconds, with mean interaction times at individual exhibits ranging from 14 seconds to 182 seconds.
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note
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This is of course not true for all science center exhibits, and much of the work of the past three decades has been to create exhibits which allow real interaction, leave room for the visitor to ask and answer their own questions, and truly engage with the material. Sadly, many, if not most, science center exhibits are still just devices that allow the visitor to set into motion principles or phenomena that someone finds interesting; the so-called "hands-on interaction" merely turns the user into an extension of the exhibit, a soft hand to bring forth the phenomenon the designer or educator intended. This tendency for exhibits to become vehicles for the designer's, rather than the visitor's, questioning was noted by science center pioneer Frank Oppenheimer, founder of the San Francisco Exploratorium, who (in a perhaps apocryphal comment) said "I don't want anyone to leave a science center thinking: 'Gee, isn't someone else clever.'"
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note
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Many studies bear out the importance of the emotional, or "hearts-on" character of the museum visit, which stems in large part from its social nature, undertaken with family and friends. This is, however, a broad generalization, and discounts the confounding effect of temporary exhibitions, special programs, multiple school visits (which are formal, rather than informal), and visits associated with "visiting friends and family ("VFF"), all of which serve to mask the three peaks in visits. It could be argued that the fact that the museum visit is most often an emotionally-charged, social occasion in the company of family and friends accounts in large measure for the observed frequency, and that even repeat visits based on this affective charge merely reinforce the pattern of visits.
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note
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As an example, in 1997, over 85 percent of the visitors to the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam were foreign tourists.
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Attendance Projections: Real and Imagined
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July/August
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See R. Russell, "Attendance Projections: Real and Imagined," The Informal Science Review, no. 25 (July/August 1997): 1.
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(1997)
The Informal Science Review
, Issue.25
, pp. 1
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Russell, R.1
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35
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July/August
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The Pacific Northwest Museum of Natural History, declared one of America's best new museums by the Smithsonian Institution, closed in 1997 - after opening only in 1994! (The Informal Science Review, no. 25 (July/August 1997): 4).
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(1997)
The Informal Science Review
, Issue.25
, pp. 4
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36
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26244461139
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November/December
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The Columbus Center Hall of Exploration in Baltimore also closed due to inadequate visitor numbers (The Informal Science Review, no. 27 (November/December 1997): 1).
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(1997)
The Informal Science Review
, Issue.27
, pp. 1
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note
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Evidence of this phenomenon can be found in a privately commissioned feasibility study conducted for Erlebnis Wien by Ravest Associates in conjunction with Drew Ann Wake and the author.
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Are Science Centers Doomed?
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See Drew Ann Wake's contribution to the debate in "Are Science Centers Doomed?" The Informal Science Review, no. 20 (1996): 2-3, which sets out many of the arguments made in this paper.
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(1996)
The Informal Science Review
, Issue.20
, pp. 2-3
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Wake, D.A.1
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85034192093
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note
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This message has not yet gotten through to many in the field, and the science center is still thought to be the vehicle for launching and demonstrating new technologies. Nora Lee, editor of the edutainment trendspotting magazine E-Zone, writes "Science centers have always been on the cutting edge, particularly in presenting new technology to the public." This statement betrays a certain confusion between the role of World's Fairs, temporary events that have traditionally been the launchpad for new technology, and science centers, which by the fact of their permanence, cannot keep up with the pace of replacing new technologies with even newer ones.
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Jan/Feb
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ASTC Newsletter 26, no. 1 (Jan/Feb 1998): 2.
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(1998)
ASTC Newsletter
, vol.26
, Issue.1
, pp. 2
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note
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Museums built in the 1980s, such as the Frankfurt Museum für Kunsthandwerk (housed in a striking Richard Meier building), are already seeing their visitor numbers fall substantially, and the lottery-funded Bristol 2000 project has already forced what some observers believe is effectively the closure of Britain's oldest hands-on science center, the Bristol Exploratory, causing speculation about the negative impact on smaller, community centers by large new-build projects.
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Informal Science in Jordan
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Paris
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Unfortunately, the opposite strategy - to fund "bricks and mortar" at the expense of programs, seems to be the norm, even in countries where investment in people would seem to demand the higher priority. Bruce Lewenstein recently visited Asia, and his report highlights a common finding that many Third World governments prefer to build monuments instead of creating new institutions of informal learning. "After a small start several years ago, the Indonesian Science and Technology Center opened in November 1995. It occupies a brand-new 24,000 sq-meter, 3-story facility in the Taman Mini Indonesia Indah. . . reputedly Indonesia's most popular attraction. The science museum is open, but still only partially full. It has about 200+ exhibits. Some were built by [a government agency's] institute on instrumentation and standards, relying on the "cookbooks' produced by the Exploratorium. Some were bought from science museums in Australia. Some are donations from companies; a few of these appear to be designed for interactive science museums, but many appear to be last year's trade show booths, ranging from a BMW exhibit touting its new aluminum drive shaft to a British defense contractor's exhibit on the lethality of its missiles. Although the museum staff had hoped to group exhibits into four areas (transport, life sciences, telecommunications, and energy), the exigencies of which exhibits they could produce, fund, or borrow have led to something of a mish-mash. . . . [The director of exhibits and education] said they are now in the process of trying to regroup the exhibits to create some coherence. Nothing she said implied that the museum has a clear long-range plan of how to build its collection of exhibits systematically. She knows that many of the exhibits provided by companies are inappropriate both in tone and design for the science museum, but accepts that for the near term she will have to work with what she can get." (Unpublished report, August 1996). See also J. Bradburne, Informal Science in Jordan (UNESCO Technical Report, Paris, 1993).
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(1993)
UNESCO Technical Report
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Bradburne, J.1
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43
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note
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Based on the author's experience on numerous science center projects.
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44
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note
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2).
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Leisure Preferences are the Key to Science Center Audience Research
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paper presented Vantaa, Finland
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M. Hood, "Leisure Preferences are the Key to Science Center Audience Research" (paper presented to World Science Center Congress, Vantaa, Finland, 1996).
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(1996)
World Science Center Congress
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Hood, M.1
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46
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Ciencia viva à Rio
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Spring
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M. Bazin, "Ciencia viva à Rio," Alliage, no. 3 (Spring 1990): 35-39.
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(1990)
Alliage
, Issue.3
, pp. 35-39
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Bazin, M.1
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47
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note
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The Anacostia Museum was developed by American psychologist Dr. Caryl Marsh for the Smithsonian Institution in the 1967, and was the first such museum in a predominantly black neighborhood.
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No business like show business
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M. Shortland, "No business like show business," Nature 328 (1987): 213-214.
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(1987)
Nature
, vol.328
, pp. 213-214
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Shortland, M.1
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50
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note
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Since it opened in June 1997, newMetropolis has been conducting active research into the effectiveness of its exhibition strategies. This research is due to be published beginning in late 1998.
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personal communication, April
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For a contrast, consider the New Jersey State Aquarium in Camden, New Jersey, USA. Built to anchor the redevelopment of a barren waterfront in an impoverished town, the institution draws only 60 percent of its breakeven needs because of the lack of other activities near it - it has no way of integrating itself into community life (Bruce Lewenstein, personal communication, April 1998).
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(1998)
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Lewenstein, B.1
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note
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2 of interactive exhibitions. Moreover, data also suggest that despite the emphasis on games and game playing, users do make the connection between the game activity and related social and technological issues.
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note
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In a recent project sponsored by a government ministry, Dutch citizens were asked to "vote" on their choice of planning strategy for the future of the country in 2030. After substantial publicity, over 1600 written ballots were sent in from throughout the country. To coincide with this event, newMetropolis designed an interactive video debate on four of its "Actua" computers. In this debate, users could watch short video clips promoting different positions, and having heard at least four opposing positions, could vote. In the two months of the national poll, over 2700 "votes" were cast at newMetropolis - more than half of the entire poll! The complete data from this experiment will be published in late 1998.
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note
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The 18 "Actua" computers at newMetropolis provide both open access to selected Internet information providers and an extensive collection of sites linked specifically to each of newMetropolis's 150+ exhibits. During an average week (about 6,000-7,000 visitors), approximately 55,000 pages of information are consulted.
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