ARTICLE - CANDIDATE TRANSITION VARIABLES

Display candidate transaction variables for article


Id 2070
Author Walker W.S.
Title History museums: Enhancing audience engagement through digital technologies
Reference
Walker W.S. History museums: Enhancing audience engagement through digital technologies,Handbook of Digital Public History

Link to article https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85136858477&doi=10.1515%2f9783110430295-014&partnerID=40&md5=83163a81d74587227de84fc1ba80aa73
Abstract This essay argues that simply putting a museum's collection online, or creating a digital kiosk that includes a collections database, does not constitute audience engagement. History museums utilize the tools and methods of digital history to increase the visibility of their collections and engage with visitors. Consequently, museums' digital strategies must explicitly contend with the question of audience. The most successful projects combine key principles of museum education, interpretation, and outreach with the capabilities of digital tools. Approaching digital history with audience engagement in mind enables history museums to achieve more effectively critical goals related to relevance, collaborative practice, and community service. © 2022 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.


Results:

Candidate transition variables
Approaching digital history with audience engagement in mind enables history museums to achieve more effectively critical goals related to relevance, collaborative practice, and community service. .
History museums utilize the tools and methods of digital history to increase the visibility of their collections and engage with visitors. .