Thursday, July 23, 2009

Context

Pearls before Breakfast - Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, April 8, 2007; Page W10


A friend shared this article with me today and I found it all the more appropriate having just come from a VSA conference session where, among other things, the concept of "value" (as in how much people value their museum and musical performance experiences) was discussed. The notion of context did creep up, though in the form of motivation (i.e., voluntary or desired attendance/participation in programming vs. being made to participate for reasons other than intrinsic interest) more so than location/venue.

I didn't assume the outcome of the experiment in the Post article would be much different than it turned out to be, but appreciate the author's effort to keep us wondering as he weaves his way through a story that is as much about the musician and the lives and times of a random sampling of DC commuters and subway station employees as it is about the psychological underpinnings of the experiment .

I googled and found a few examples of some of the recordings of the songs that violin virtuoso, Bell, played and enjoyed familiarizing myself with them and sampling their beauty as I read through the article. I don't know a ton about music, I don't even know if I'd consider myself a fan of music (I haven't used my ipod in nearly 2 years!). I feel guilty when I think how much my parents invested in years of piano lessons that left me able to memorize pieces of varying length and complexity but never truly able to read or play music competently. I'd much rather imagine myself to be one of the few who recognized his genius or the mere beauty of the music he was creating but I suspect I would have been in the majority on that day in January two years ago - one of the thousand-plus who quickly passed by, avoiding eye contact with Bell, and feeling frustration over being made to feel guilty for not being willing to fish out my wallet. I don't think I know enough about music to have been truly able to appreciate the quality of the performance being given in that unlikely environment - and, given the inabilty to fully appreciate what I was hearing, I wouldn't even realize what I was tuning out.

In the session I just attended we pondered the notion that people value something more when it isn't free (e.g., examples of being able to get rid of more concert tickets when they are sold at $10 off face value than when they are given away totally free of charge). It didn't seem right to me, because I'm always looking for (and enjoying) free entertainment - but I understood it a little better after reading this article in the post. Accoustics aside, the music he was performing for sold out concert halls full of people paying upwards of $100 for a seat was no different than the music he was freely sharing with commuters at L'Enfant plaza on that particular morning - but the former example creates a more appropriate context for valuing the experience.

The story provides a vivid example of why context and motivation matter. It reminded me of the saying: "You can lead a horse to water but you can't make them drink." Certainly there must also be at least an ounce of truth to that statement when we think about "free choice learning." Often the choice to engage in informal learning experiences is not the choice of everyone in attendance (i.e., the children that get drug along by overzealous parents, the students that get loaded onto a bus and thrown into the experience with little more than a brief introduction to help provide context for their experience - if that). Even if faced with the most beautiful or wonderful works of art, music, or the most fabulous exhibits, do visitors actually manage to find meaning and value if they aren't in the right mindset, or don't have the right level of understanding, to look for it?

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Photos from the walking tour at the Visitor Studies Association Conference

St. Louis Missouri - July 21-25th

Had a great time giving a workshop on museum website evaluation yesterday with Monnette. This morning I went on a walking tour around downtown St. Louis and snapped a few photos along the way with my phone (a G1 that has become my favorite research tool in recent weeks - after learning that I could also do pretty decent digital recordings as well).

Photo Highlights at: http://picasaweb.google.com/jennifer.borse/SaintLouis#

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Pen-Enabled Technology Conference - Call for papers

Good conference - I attended back in 2006 and found it to be engaging and enlightening. Unfortunately I haven't had much opportunity to do research on pen enabled technology since then, but its definitely worth checking out if that's something that's an area of interest.

"Submissions (papers, posters, and vidoes) to WIPTE 2009 are being accepted until June 15th, 2009. Information is available on the WIPTE web site at www.wipte.org WIPTE 2009 will be held at Virginia Tech on October 12th and 13th 2009. Accepted papers will appear in a Monograph to be published by Purdue University Press"

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

to kindle or not to kindle

On a recent flight home from Philadelphia I saw a Kindle for the first time in real life. It was sleek and futuristic looking - and oh so tempting...

The thought of being able to replace rooms full of crammed bookshelves with one device the size of a small notebook was alluring...the notion of being able to have any book that I desired, almost instantly, was mesmerizing.

But then, during a somewhat prolonged taxi and takeoff process (ah, the joys of rush hour on a rainy day at the airport), one of its glaring flaws struck me: even though it doesn't use power to display text, it does require power to turn pages, so unless you are a really slow reader - it would almost definitely qualify as an electronic device that must be turned off during takeoff and landing. Those are the times I most crave something to read...before return flights I'm often scrambling through newsstands to find new reading material (since I finished reading the complimentary airline magazines on my departing flight). All the easily-downloadable content in the world can't save you from the boredom of sitting on a runway for 30 minutes if you can't turn on your kindle.

Undoubtedly, its a true conservationists' dream: no trees killed to bring everyone and endless supply of reading content!...but where reading is concerned, some of my favorite ways to recycle are tearing articles to share with friends or passing along a book for someone else to read (often along with scribbled notes, rhetorical questions, and other wacky Jenisms in the margins).

And as far as I can tell, you can't rent content, i.e., there don't seem to be any discounts for buying and deleting as soon as you're done. If you buy a real-life book you can at least share it, re-sell it or donate it when you are done.

And apparently, there's no color - great for books and the New York Times; not so great for comic books and fashion or decorating magazines.

Lastly, and perhaps most importantly for me, books and magazines can take a lot of abuse - being rolled up and stuffed into purses and suitcases, having entire bottles of wine or water spilled on them...being tossed, dropped or bumped. As tough as a kindle might be, I don't know that it could stand up to my chronic clutziness.

None-the-less, I caught myself thinking that it might be a nice new toy to have.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Article: Is Technology Producing A Decline In Critical Thinking And Analysis?

ScienceDaily (2009-01-29) -- As technology has played a bigger role in our lives, our skills in critical thinking and analysis have declined, while our visual skills have improved, according to psychological research.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/01/090128092341.htm#

Some of the interesting assertions made in the article:

"Reading for pleasure, which has declined among young people in recent decades, enhances thinking and engages the imagination in a way that visual media such as video games and television do not, Greenfield said."

Also

"No one medium is good for everything," Greenfield said. "If we want to develop a variety of skills, we need a balanced media diet. Each medium has costs and benefits in terms of what skills each develops."

Her research found that:
"multi-tasking 'prevents people from getting a deeper understanding of information.'"

Cite:
University of California - Los Angeles (2009, January 29). Is Technology Producing A Decline In Critical Thinking And Analysis?. ScienceDaily. Retrieved February 25, 2009, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2009/01/090128092341.htm#