What science communication for equitable communication? From conceptualizations to reconceptualizations and practices
Afonso, S; Afonso, AS; Lopes, AS; et al.de Souza Gonzalez, AC
Date: 11 July 2022
Article
Journal
Curator: The Museum Journal
Publisher
Wiley
Publisher DOI
Abstract
While museum educators are essential to engage under-served publics in science, their
communication often reinforces dominant cultural norms and disengage visitors. Why are
certain communication models so dominant and why are the cultural norms that underpin
these so resistant to reconceptualisation? What conceptualizations about ...
While museum educators are essential to engage under-served publics in science, their
communication often reinforces dominant cultural norms and disengage visitors. Why are
certain communication models so dominant and why are the cultural norms that underpin
these so resistant to reconceptualisation? What conceptualizations about science
communication are held by museum coordinators and how representative are they of the real
practices? We explored these through an interpretative phenomenological approach in the
context of a mobile museum with a social-justice agenda. The analysis of museum
coordinators’ and museum educators’ narratives, through the perspective of Idealised
Cognitive Models (ICMs), shows that: coordinators hold two dichotomous ICMs: a dominant
deficit model, and a non-dominant participatory ICM. The data from museum educators,
however, indicate the coexistence of blended practices, which attempt at establishing
dialogue, but fail to align with the participatory model. This shows the difficulty in
reconceptualising the deficit ICM, as it is deeply rooted in long-standing enlightenment
project of museums and reinforced by organisational factors.
Portuguese
Collections of Former Colleges
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