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Adventures in Evaluating Participatory Exhibits: An In-Depth Look at the Memory Jar Project

Museum 2.0

There were no written instructions, just a mural that suggested what to do and labels that prompted people for their name and memory. THE RESEARCH The challenge, of course, was to figure out how to evaluate the experience in a way that would help us identify the power of the project.

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Reflections on the Meyer Memorial Trust Workshop

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Then, I match this against participant feedback/evaluations. What I'm after are ways to tweak the design to improve learning and to improve instructional practice. I always try to incorporate new learnings and observations that I've discovered from the many interviews I do on my blog, resources discovered, and stories.

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5 Tips And Tactics To Become A Master Nonprofit Wordsmith

Bloomerang

Our distaste for writing followed us into adulthood because we still suffer from the same writing inadequacies we had in childhood. A single compelling press release might land you a national television interview that leads to 100 new donors and $100,000 in funding. We suffer writer’s block. We struggle to organize thoughts.

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