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Research Articles

Defining the Chaperone's Role as Escort, Educator or Parent

Pages 160-174 | Published online: 09 Oct 2010
 

ABSTRACT

The concept of family learning in museums emphasizes the interaction between related adults and children through the process of free-choice learning. The complexity of family learning in the context of school visits presents new questions for museum staff on the role of chaperones and the extent to which chaperone-led groups might function as family units. Do chaperones operate as escorts, educators, or parents on a museum field trip? This article provides a brief overview of existing field trip and chaperone research findings, raises some critical questions on the role of parents as chaperones, and describes the results from a study on chaperone behavior in the museum. Results from observations of 289 chaperones in a children's museum setting suggest that chaperone behavior is not necessarily influenced by exhibition context, but parents and chaperones do differ in preferred family learning interactions with children in museum exhibitions.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Special thanks to Melissa Pederson and Jeffrey Hughes, members of the research team.

Notes

1. Names of exhibitions have been changed.

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