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- Title
INTERACTIVE EXHIBIT THEORY: HINTS FOR IMPLEMENTING LEARNER-CENTERED ACTIVITIES IN ELEMENTARY CLASSROOMS.
- Authors
Speaker, Kathryne Mcgrath
- Abstract
Classroom tasks should develop a spirit of inquiry and a sense of delight in discovery that will become part of the individual's learning style. Yet in the traditional elementary classroom, the use of worksheets, lectures and basal reading tasks to the exclusion of hands-on, participatory opportunities fails to encourage a child's construction of knowledge. By setting up a problem to be solved, demanding interaction, producing effects from direct actions and allowing variations of approach, cognitive development in children is enhanced. Hands-On Children's Museums encourage contextually relevant reasoning. These museums are successful, concrete examples of interactive, participatory learning. As reflected in their interactive exhibits, the combination of a realistic setting and the use of objects that belong in that setting is being recognized as an important educational development. Their continued and increasing popularity is unprecedented and the framework used so successfully in the museum context can be translated into the elementary classroom. A study of 259 Children's Museums in the United States was undertaken by the author to examine what kinds of similarities existed in this type of museum. Research questions addressed demographics, exhibit type, interactivity, and success and educational programs. This paper analyzes portions of that data in order to propose an outline for creating an equally successful interactive environment in elementary classrooms.
- Subjects
LEARNING strategies; CHILDREN'S museums; ELEMENTARY school teaching; LEARNING by discovery
- Publication
Education, 2001, Vol 121, Issue 3, p610
- ISSN
0013-1172
- Publication type
Article