Understanding producers' intentions and viewers' learning outcomes in a science museum theatre play on evolution
Understanding producers' intentions and viewers' learning outcomes in a science museum theatre play on evolution
Science museums often introduce plays to liven up exhibits, attract visitors to specific exhibitions, and help visitors to “digest” difficult content. Most previous research has concentrated on viewers’ learning outcomes. This study uses performance and spectator analyses from the field of theater studies to explore the link between producers’ intended aims, the written script, and the learning outcomes. We also use the conflict of didactics and aesthetics, common to the design of both educational plays and science museum exhibits, as a lens for understanding our data. “Darwin’s journey,” a play about evolution, was produced by a major science museum in Israel. The producers’ objectives were collected through in-depth interviews. A structural analysis was conducted on the script. Viewer (n = 103) and nonviewer (n = 90) data were collected via a questionnaire. The results show strong evidence for the encoding of all of the producers’ aims in the script. Explicit and cognitive aims were decoded as intended by the viewers. The evidence was weak for the decoding of implicit and affective aims. While the producers were concerned with the conflict of didactics and aesthetics, this conflict was not apparent in the script. The conflict is discussed within the broader context of science education in informal settings.
715-741
Peleg, R.
99135615-235e-4bd3-a58e-12bab19fdd8c
Baram-Tsabari, A.
405352f6-5c66-4f87-abc0-45f47b75236c
1 October 2016
Peleg, R.
99135615-235e-4bd3-a58e-12bab19fdd8c
Baram-Tsabari, A.
405352f6-5c66-4f87-abc0-45f47b75236c
Peleg, R. and Baram-Tsabari, A.
(2016)
Understanding producers' intentions and viewers' learning outcomes in a science museum theatre play on evolution.
Research in Science Education, 46 (5), .
(doi:10.1007/s11165-015-9477-7).
Abstract
Science museums often introduce plays to liven up exhibits, attract visitors to specific exhibitions, and help visitors to “digest” difficult content. Most previous research has concentrated on viewers’ learning outcomes. This study uses performance and spectator analyses from the field of theater studies to explore the link between producers’ intended aims, the written script, and the learning outcomes. We also use the conflict of didactics and aesthetics, common to the design of both educational plays and science museum exhibits, as a lens for understanding our data. “Darwin’s journey,” a play about evolution, was produced by a major science museum in Israel. The producers’ objectives were collected through in-depth interviews. A structural analysis was conducted on the script. Viewer (n = 103) and nonviewer (n = 90) data were collected via a questionnaire. The results show strong evidence for the encoding of all of the producers’ aims in the script. Explicit and cognitive aims were decoded as intended by the viewers. The evidence was weak for the decoding of implicit and affective aims. While the producers were concerned with the conflict of didactics and aesthetics, this conflict was not apparent in the script. The conflict is discussed within the broader context of science education in informal settings.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 14 September 2015
Published date: 1 October 2016
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Local EPrints ID: 435392
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/435392
ISSN: 0157-244X
PURE UUID: 1f662c9e-0998-4945-8775-18bfaf203d0a
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Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:58
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A. Baram-Tsabari
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