Rethinking the Museum Visitor Experience John H. Falk Sea Grant Free-Choice Learning Professor...

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Rethinking the Museum Visitor Experience John H. Falk Sea Grant Free-Choice Learning Professor Oregon State University

Transcript of Rethinking the Museum Visitor Experience John H. Falk Sea Grant Free-Choice Learning Professor...

Page 1: Rethinking the Museum Visitor Experience John H. Falk Sea Grant Free-Choice Learning Professor Oregon State University.

Rethinking the Museum Visitor Experience

John H. FalkSea Grant Free-Choice Learning Professor

Oregon State University

Page 2: Rethinking the Museum Visitor Experience John H. Falk Sea Grant Free-Choice Learning Professor Oregon State University.

Key Questions:

• Why do people visit museums? 

• What do visitors do inside the museum and why?

• What meanings do visitors take away from their museum visit? 

• How would this information allow us to improve museum practice?

Page 3: Rethinking the Museum Visitor Experience John H. Falk Sea Grant Free-Choice Learning Professor Oregon State University.

Most efforts to describe and understand museums and their visitors have begun and ended inside the “four walls” of the museum.

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Most efforts to describe and understand museums and their visitors have focused on PERMANENT qualities of either:

MUSEUM – content or style of exhibits

VISITOR – age, race/ethnicity visit frequency, social arrangement

or address

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The museum visitor experience is not something tangible and immutable but rather an ephemeral,

constructed relationship that uniquely occurs each time a person visits a museum.

The museum visitor experience extends beyond the museum’s spatial and temporal

boundaries.

BEFORE VISIT AFTER VISIT

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Q: What would make these people, visit this museum, on this day?

•A: Each and every visitor comes in •order to fulfill his/her own

•personal (identity-related) needs.

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Defining Identity• Both internal and external – how we

perceive ourselves and others perceive us.

• We don’t have just one identity but multiple identities; each situated within the realities of physical and socio-cultural world.

• We have both “I” identities and “i” identities.

• Identity can be made “visible” through descriptions of motivations/needs/actions.

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Identity-Related Visit Motivations

People visit museums in order to satisfy some personal and/or social need or desire.

• Identity-related motivations are based upon the ways the public (currently) perceives the attributes and value of a particular museum.

Page 9: Rethinking the Museum Visitor Experience John H. Falk Sea Grant Free-Choice Learning Professor Oregon State University.

What Happens at the MuseumAs we’ve learned over many years, the museum visit is shaped by the visitor’s Personal, Socio-Cultural and Physical Contexts.

Page 10: Rethinking the Museum Visitor Experience John H. Falk Sea Grant Free-Choice Learning Professor Oregon State University.

However, a visitor’s identity-related visit motivation(s) create a basic

trajectory for the visit.

WHY someone comes to the museum shapes WHAT he/she finds interesting & important.

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Long-Term Impact of Experience• Why a person comes to

the museum not only shapes what s/he does in the museum but also his/ her long-term memories and the meanings created about the experience.

So Why Do People Come to Museums?

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Explorer

Motivated by Personal CuriosityMotivated by Personal Curiosity

I came here primarily because it interested me and I thought I’d

like it...

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Facilitator

Motivated by Other People

I came here primarily because others would

like it or wanted to come.

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Experience Seeker

Motivated by Desire to See & Experience Place

I came here because it was an attraction or

thing to do in this community; its

reputation.

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Professional/Hobbyist

Motivated by Specific Knowledge-Related GoalsMotivated by Specific Knowledge-Related Goals

I came here primarily because it relates

to something I actively pursue as my

job or my hobby.

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Recharger

Motivated by Contemplative or

Restorative Experience

I came here primarily because it will help

me feel refreshed or focused or

appreciative

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Cultural Affinity

Motivated by “I” Identity

I came here primarily because it speaks to

my heritage, my sense of personhood.

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Respectful Pilgrim

Motivated by Sense of Duty or Obligation

I came here primarily to honor

the memory of those represented

here.

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What My Research Shows:

• The majority of visitors to all kinds of museums can be successfully categorized as visiting for one, or some combination, of these 5 (7) identity-related reasons.

Individuals with similar motivations have qualitatively similar visit experiences and long-term patterns of long-term meaning making.

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Implications for Practice

Identity-related motivations do not answer all aspects of:* Why visitors come* What they do in the museum* What they take away

However, a wide range of museum functions can benefit

by using this perspective --

Education & Exhibit Design

Marketing & Visitor Services

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Education & Exhibit Design:

• By knowing visitor’s entering identity-related visit motivations we can better customize the museum visit experience and provide each visitor what s/he really wants.

• Exhibits and programs, • Including school field• trips, should be • designed to • accommodate the• diversity of visitor • needs and interests.

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Marketing & Visitor Studies:

Visitors’ identity-related motivations help us understand why visitors ARE CURRENTLY coming to our museums. They also tells us why people DO NOT CURRENTLY visit.

Visitors’ identity-related motivations provide a way to more accurately measure whether visitors learned from their experiences.