
Practical Evaluation Guide
Description
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Evaluation is essential because it allows you to answer critical questions like:
How can one measure the impacts of educational experiences in a museum, zoo, or aquarium?Are digital technologies more effective than traditional exhibits for enhancing visitor interest and understanding? How does one measure learning in these informal environments where visitors themselves decide what they will experience? Since we know many visitors come to informal institutions for social interaction and play, how does one access these social impacts?
The Practical Evaluation Guide is an all-in-one resource to guide professionals working in museums and other informal educational institutions. This new edition includes updates throughout and features a brand-new chapter on evaluating digital interactive exhibits. The section on observational tools includes a new section on using video recordings and the section on interviews includes recent studies from countries outside the U.S.
Practical Evaluation Guide serves as a basic, easy-to-follow guide for museum professionals and students who want to understand the effects of such public institutions on the people who visit them.
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Persons
Michael Stephen Horn is assistant professor of learning sciences and computer science at Northwestern University where he directs the Tangible Interaction Design and Learning Lab. Horn earned a PhD in Human Computer Interaction from Tufts University in 2009 and has been developing innovative technology-based learning experiences for museum and other informal learning environments for over ten year. His research interests involve understanding the role of cultural forms in shaping participating and learning around physical and technological artifacts. He is the author of over 30 scholarly articles and his work can be seen at the Museum of Science, Boston, the California Academy of Sciences, the Field Museum, and the Computer History Museum.
David H. Uttal is professor of psychology and education at Northwestern University. He holds a doctorate in developmental psychology from the University of Michigan, and he is the author of over 50 articles and book chapters. His research interests are in the development of children's thinking, with a focus on symbolic and spatial reasoning, and his work has been supported by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, and the Institute of Education Sciences. At Northwestern he directs the multidisciplinary program in education sciences, which trains graduate students from different disciplines to conduct rigorous research in educational contexts.
Content
Acknowledgements
Preface
Part I Evaluating Informal Learning
Chapter 1 Thinking through an Evaluation
Chapter 2 Informal Learning
Chapter 3 Measuring Learning
Chapter 4 Protecting Study Participants
Part II Evaluation Tools
Chapter 5 Selecting Study Participants
Chapter 6 Observational Tools
Chapter 7 Interviews and Questionnaires
Chapter 8 Presenting and Analyzing Data
Part III Evaluating Digital Media: Opportunities and Pitfalls
Chapter 9 Evaluating Digital Interactive Exhibits
Chapter 10 Tools for Evaluating Digital Exhibits
Part IV Evaluation as Practice
Chapter 11 Making Evaluation Count
References
Index
About the Authors
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