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Tue, 13 Jan 2009 13:26:35 -0500 |
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We offered a similar type camp for middle school students many years ago
(1988). It was called something like Planetarium Staff for a Day. We had
the kids in the class each take one of the staff roles in the
planetarium. Their goal was to learn what we did on a daily basis to
provide programming for the planetarium and to produce a short
planetarium program. Each student took a separate role in the
production: script writer, producer, researcher (fact checker), PR,
media selection (slides and video clips), audio technician (record and
edit soundtrack), voice talent, programmer (install program in theater
using automation system), etc. Of course the museum didn't have that
many staff, one actual staff member might do many of these roles. But it
helped break it down for the students.
Each student was then tasked with doing all of these tasks
simultaneously. The PR students would have to write press releases,
create an advertising plan and then advertise the new show. They needed
to get information from the scriptwriter, producer and media staff on
what the new show was about and get some images that could be used to
advertise the show. The scriptwriter may not have decided what the topic
of the show was yet, images may not have been picked out. And they all
had deadlines that were imposed as part of the structure of the camp.
Plus the students had to work around the public show schedule and could
only install the new show in the theater in the breaks between shows.
(Just like real life.)
As you can see it got a bit hectic with everyone trying to do their
jobs. They learned how to coordinate with each other and that other
museum staff were depending on them to provide materials.
It was great fun. The students actually produced a nice program. They
presented their program to family members and the general public at the
end of the camp just as if it were an actual museum offering on the
schedule.
I'm sure you could do something analogous where the students create an
exhibit on some topic.
Patrick
--
Patrick McQuillan
Education & Outreach Specialist
IRIS
1200 New York Ave., NW, Suite 800
Washington, DC 20005
Tel: 202-682-2220
Fax: 202-682-2444
www.iris.edu
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