Remove Artist Remove Audience Remove Evaluation Remove Teen
article thumbnail

The Participatory Nonprofit?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

" He describes what Ian observed what happened with his youth audience. According to recent study from Pew Internet and American Life project, more than one-half of teens have created media content and roughly one-third have shared ocntent. the ability to evaluate the reliability and credibility of different information.

article thumbnail

AAM Recap: Slides, Observations, and Object Fetishism

Museum 2.0

We started with a brief presentation of the basics of each project, and then spent about an hour responding to questions from the audience, using illustrative images and documents to support the discussion. Their use of the web to connect independent artists all over the world was striking and very surprising. Neither Click!

Slides 20
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Using Social Bridging to Be "For Everyone" in a New Way

Museum 2.0

We''re more successful when we target particular communities or audiences and design experiences for them. In the past, I''ve subscribed to the theory that an organization should target many different groups and types of people to serve a constellation of specific audiences across diverse affinities, needs, and interests.

Museum 55
article thumbnail

Self-Censorship for Museum Professionals

Museum 2.0

As part of the session, Tom led live drawing ( click for high-res image ), and we invited the audience to add their own “can’t dos” to a large map of things that are “safe,” “iffy,” and “no way”--more on that later. Focusing on youth audiences can lead to heavy and sometimes inappropriate self-censorship. The audio starts noisy.

Museum 20