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Original Articles

School visits to zoos and museums: a missed educational opportunity?

, &
Pages 1039-1056 | Published online: 24 Feb 2007
 

Recent studies in exhibitions have begun to consider the cognitive content of the ‘dialogue’ between visitor and exhibit designer. Such studies have focused on the leisure visitor and not on organised school visits. The study reported here compares the conversational content of primary school and family visitors at the London Zoo and the Natural History Museum, London. The data show that there are common features to the children's interactions with animal exhibits and that the content of the conversations varies little between family groups and school groups both within an institution and between institutions. The lack of any marked distinction between school and family visitors strongly suggests that schools are failing to make effective use of the educational potential of zoos. Secondly, the findings of this study are important in pointing to the features of animal exhibits to which children, and their accompanying adults, attend. The data suggest that there is a gulf between the level of knowledge and understanding visitors bring to the exhibits and the message that the museums and zoos may wish to communicate. It is suggested that more successful education will only be achieved when museums and zoos give more credence to understanding what the visitor already does, or does not, know.

Notes

* Present address: Sue Dale Tunnicliff, Homerton College, Cambridge CB2 2PH, UK.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Sue Dale TunnicliffeFootnote*

* Present address: Sue Dale Tunnicliff, Homerton College, Cambridge CB2 2PH, UK.

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