Audience Research
Join discussions about museum evaluation and audience research.
Our Bloggers
Lynda Kelly
Manager Online, Editing and Audience Research
Chris Lang
Audience Researcher/Advocate
Michael Hugill
Online Producer @michaelhugill
Irene Rubino
Intern
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Audience Research
- Dec 2011
- Nov 2011
- Oct 2011
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Aug 2011
- Notes From the Future: A Reflection on My Internship
- Science in the City: Sparking Interest
- Digital Literacies ... and app development
- Evaluation Twitter feeds to follow
- My Critical Appraisal of Surviving Australia
- Weapons! To battle ... or not to battle?
- Natural history specimens as social media stars: Mr Blobby
- Birds of Paradise Exhibition: Title Testing Results
- Do museum shops need to know about Web 2.0 and social media?
- Kids Teaching Kids - Solutions in the Works
- Ask a curator...1 September 2010
- Value Packaging for Families
- Smithsonian Commons Prototype
- Kids and credibility in the online world
- Twitter as an audience research tool?
- USA Trip 2010: Impressions from a land far far away
- The dinner table
- How do Australian Museum visitors use social media?
- Smartphones and open content – emerging trends
- Are we addicted to social media?
- Visitors to the Australian Museum use social media
- Sep 2011
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- Dec 2010
- Oct 2010
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Sep 2010
- An introduction to Twitter
- Digital Heritage Students Lecture
- The Science of Climate Change: Questions and Answers
- Science in the City - The Final Lap!
- Science in the City - the Marathon Begins!
- Science in the City - A Marathon of Heroes
- How to be clever on Facebook
- Museums and the Web Conference 2010
- Museums and Web 2.0
- Web 2.0 for small and volunteer museums
- Aug 2010
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- Dec 2009
- Nov 2009
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Oct 2009
- Innovation in the Art Museum Symposium Taipei Day 2
- Innovation in the Art Museum Symposium Taipei Day 1
- What is the Audience Research Blog?
- Taipei Travels October 2009
- Handheld technology in museums
- Museums on Twitter
- Papers on museums and Web 2.0
- Knowledge Workers
- Crowdsourcing and exhibition development
- Applying and sharing research findings
- Summative Evaluation: Dinosaur Unearthed Exhibition
- Interest in Ancient Cultures
- Climate Change and Museums
- Sep 2009
- Aug 2009
- Jul 2009
- May 2009
My Critical Appraisal of Surviving Australia
Box jellyfish, a giant wombat, and whale song all got my attention, among other things.
I'm grateful to have been given the opportunity to complete a critical appraisal of the permanent exhibit Surviving Australia, as found that I really enjoyed the process. Switching gears from objectivity to subjectivity was much easier than I anticipated, and felt a lot like how I would approach writing a scholarly book review.
Here are my findings:
What Attracted My Attention
• Giant wombat
• Documentary movies
• The touch table: while I didn’t have any desire to play with it, I watched people used it for a good while. I thought, “That’d be fun to do with my husband if he were here.”
• Deep Sea touch screen
• Video footage in “Sponge gardens in Sydney”
• Video footage of the thylacine and the thylacine story in general
• The specimens of box jellyfish on display and information about box jellies
What Didn’t Attract My Attention
• The fossilized bones on display; my reaction was, “I’ve already seen that.”
• The table of specimens; not enough interpretation for me to be interested
• Mounts of animals in the section that talked about extinction and endangered species
What I Especially Liked
• The exhibit “soundtrack” – the sounds being played throughout the exhibit really added to my experience
• I kept smiling when I saw the “hidden” animal mounts placed around the exhibit
What I Especially Didn’t Like
• The live reptiles in the exhibit; even though they grabbed my attention, they evoked negative feelings
• Anything I had “seen before”: jaw bones, mounts, seashells
Conclusion
All in all, I was mainly drawn to:
• Australian things I was already vaguely familiar with but wanted to know more about (wombat, koala, emu)
• Things I thought were weird (giant wombat), scary (box jellies), or striking (deep sea creatures)
• The story of the thylacine and the video of it when it was alive
• The specimens of the box jellyfish: I hear about them in America all the time, but I’ve never seen them in person. The scale of how small they are and yet how much damage they can do is very powerful
Michelle DelCarlo
, Intern
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