Understanding implicit learning in museums and galleries

Authors

  • Alex Elwick CfBT Education Trust, Reading

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v13i4.343

Abstract

Implicit learning, learning we are not aware of, or learning which results in
knowledge we do not know we possess or cannot articulate, is often considered
to be a ubiquitous part of life, and yet is rarely studied in real-world contexts. This
paper presents an attempt to research implicit learning amongst museum and
gallery visitors, with the ultimate aim being to understand whether implicit learning
takes place in the museum and how we might begin to unearth such tacit (silent)
knowledge. Examples drawn from interviewees with members of gallery ‘friends’
associations provide evidence that people often possess knowledge they are
seemingly unaware of, directly derived from their museum/gallery experiences. The
methodology explored here acts as a formative means to study implicit learning
and the paper suggests how this might be further developed.

Author Biography

Alex Elwick, CfBT Education Trust, Reading

Dr Alex Elwick is a research officer at CfBT Education Trust (an education charity and multi-academy trust based in Reading, England). He completed his AHRC-funded PhD on
‘non-formal learning in museums and galleries’ at Newcastle University in 2013 where he also worked as a university teacher. He has undertaken a UK Research Councils’ sponsored fellowship at the Library of Congress, Washington DC, and published work on topics including the UK digital divide and the success of London schools. He is an Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.

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Published

11/01/2015

How to Cite

Elwick, A. (2015). Understanding implicit learning in museums and galleries. Museum & Society, 13(4), 420–431. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v13i4.343