Exhibit Designs for Girls’ Engagement (EDGE)

July 23rd, 2018 | RESEARCH

This paper describes an NSF-funded study which explored the relationship between female-responsive exhibit designs and girls’ engagement. Across three participating science centers, 906 museum visitors ages 8 to 13 were observed at 334 interactive physics, math, engineering, and perception exhibits. We measured girls’ engagement based on whether they chose to use or return to the exhibits, opted to spend more time at them, or demonstrated deeper engagement behavior. Findings suggest that the design strategies identified in our previously developed Female-Responsive Design Framework can inform exhibit designs that better engage girls. However, the specific design attributes that address the broader strategies are not all equal: we identified a subset of nine exhibit design attributes that were consistently strongly related to girls’ engagement. Further, none of those nine design attributes were harmful to boys’ engagement. In practice, we hope educators will help address gender disparities in museums by considering female-responsive design when creating STEM exhibits: broadening their design approaches and choosing among the nine EDGE Design Attributes based on their appropriateness for a particular exhibit experience or set of exhibits.

Document

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Team Members

Toni Dancstep, Author, Exploratorium
Lisa Sindorf, Author, Exploratorium

Citation

Identifier Type: DOI
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1111/cura.12267
Identifier Type: ISSN
Identifier: 2151-6952

Publication: Curator: The Museum Journal
Volume: 61
Number: 3
Page(s): 485-506

Funders

Funding Source: NSF
Funding Program: AISL
Award Number: 1323806

Related URLs

Full Text
Research: Exhibit Designs for Girls' Engagement (EDGE)

Tags

Access and Inclusion: Women and Girls
Audience: Elementary School Children (6-10) | Learning Researchers | Middle School Children (11-13) | Museum | ISE Professionals
Discipline: Engineering | Health and medicine | Mathematics | Physics
Resource Type: Peer-reviewed article | Research Products
Environment Type: Exhibitions | Museum and Science Center Exhibits