Changing Museum Visitors’ Conceptions of Evolution

We examined whether a single visit to an evolution exhibition contributed to conceptual change in adult ( n  = 30), youth, and child ( n  = 34) museum visitors’ reasoning about evolution. The exhibition included seven current research projects in evolutionary science, each focused on a different org...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Evolution education & outreach Vol. 5; no. 1; pp. 43 - 61
Main Authors: Spiegel, Amy N., Evans, E. Margaret, Frazier, Brandy, Hazel, Ashley, Tare, Medha, Gram, Wendy, Diamond, Judy
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: New York Springer US 13-04-2012
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:We examined whether a single visit to an evolution exhibition contributed to conceptual change in adult ( n  = 30), youth, and child ( n  = 34) museum visitors’ reasoning about evolution. The exhibition included seven current research projects in evolutionary science, each focused on a different organism. To frame this study, we integrated a developmental model of visitors’ understanding of evolution, which incorporates visitors’ intuitive beliefs, with a model of free-choice learning that includes personal, sociocultural, and contextual variables. Using pre- and post-measures, we assessed how visitors’ causal explanations about biological change, drawn from three reasoning patterns (evolutionary, intuitive, and creationist), were modified as a result of visiting the exhibition. Whatever their age, background beliefs, or prior intuitive reasoning patterns, visitors significantly increased their use of explanations from the evolutionary reasoning pattern across all measures and extended this reasoning across diverse organisms. Visitors also increased their use of one intuitive reasoning pattern, need-based (goal-directed) explanations, which, we argue, may be a step toward evolutionary reasoning. Nonetheless, visitors continued to use mixed reasoning (endorsing all three reasoning patterns) in explaining biological change. The personal, socio-cultural, and contextual variables were found to be related to these reasoning patterns in predictable ways. These findings are used to examine the structure of visitors’ reasoning patterns and those aspects of the exhibition that may have contributed to the gains in museum visitors’ understanding of evolution.
ISSN:1936-6426
1936-6434
DOI:10.1007/s12052-012-0399-9