TITEL
The missing link in learning in science centres
FöRFATTARE
Fors, Vaike
INSTITUTION
Utbildningsvetenskap
SAMMANFATTNING
Science centres have been identified as an important resource in
encouraging teenagers to choose higher education in science and technology.
This is of interest to society, since there seems to be a problem in
getting sufficient numbers to do so. And accomplishing this is sometimes
described as a fatal question for a nation’s future prosperity and
development. Still, there is an international trend where teenagers fail to
visit science centres. Through research, little is known about what is
interesting or useful to the public, as well as how to reach those who
are ‘unengaged’. Considering teenagers as exponents for what distinguishes
today’s society makes their apparent unwillingness to participate in
science centres interesting to study with regards to what culture, history
and ideology these centres were initially produced. Hence, from this point
of view, what is missing in science centres that would make them
interesting for the young people of today?
Many studies of learning in science centres have come to focus on visitors
who visit voluntarily and how well the embedded messages in the exhibits
have been acknowledged by these visitors. This study focuses instead on
teenagers who are reluctant to participate in science centres, with their
perspective of science centres as the point of departure, specifically what
kind of social activities are formed in their encounters with science
centre exhibits. This encounter is regarded as an encounter between the two
different practices of the science centre and the teenagers. The applied
theoretical perspective is mainly assembled from socio-cultural theories of
learning.
This research is a microanalytic study of five teenagers who were equipped
with video cameras and asked to film a visit to the local science centre,
Teknikens Hus. The films were later discussed in a focus-group interview
consisting of the teenagers and the researcher. Visual ethnography provided
the theoretical framework for this research design. The results showed that
the teenagers want to use exhibits to have the authority of interpretations
and the possibilities to contribute to the meaning of the activity. At the
same time, they want to use the exhibits in a way that the activities
become places for developing social identity. To negotiate the meaning of
the exhibits there is a need for an openness that may be constrained by too
inflexible and limiting exhibit designs. This pattern is described as two
different forms of participation in the exhibits; ignoring or extending the
intended meaning of the exhibits. Meaningfulness also demands a closeness
created by connections between the exhibit and the user’s personal
experiences. This pattern is described as two different ways in which the
teenagers identified the exhibits; exhibits which they dissociated from or
to which they had an ongoing relationship. Providing a space for
negotiation seems crucial to inviting teenagers into opportunities of
meaningful experiences, even more significant than any specific physical
feature in the exhibit.
The teenagers’ agenda, in which forming practices where they can express
themselves and contribute to the meaning seem to be very important, appears
not to be greatly enabled by science centre exhibits. In this situation
they learn to not participate. Science and technology represented in this
matter show a ‘ready-made’ world that they cannot change. The missing link
in learning in science centres is here described as the part of the meaning
making process where the teenagers get to re-negotiate the meaning of the
activities in the centre and use the exhibits as tools to accomplish this.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--06/07--SE / NR 2006:07
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