How to Create Intellectual Comfort

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Today I’m exploring the concept of creating intellectual comfort in your museum and gallery programmes. In my (forthcoming) book Slow Looking at Art: The Visible Thinking in the Museum Approach I have a chapter dedicated to creating a collaborative culture in your museum and gallery programmes. As part of this chapter, I talk about how important it is to make participants feel not only psychologically safe, but also intellectually safe. Museums can be intimidating spaces. And this is particularly prevalent in art museums and around art in general. So many people feel that museums are not places for them, that there is a prerequisite amount of information required before you can enjoy being in a museum. Your job as a facilitator is to ensure that everyone feels confident and able to participate fully in your programme, whatever their motivation or knowledge level upon arriving. This is what it means to create intellectual comfort on a museum or gallery programme. In today's episode, I'm exploring what intellectual comfort is, why it's important and 8 ways you can foster it in your programmes. LinksEPISODE WEB PAGE Episode 74 - How to Enjoy Art (without knowing anything about it) Episode 44 - The 4 elements of a great introductionEpisode 48 - 10 types of questions you should never askDownload the Ultimate Thinking Routine ListSupport the ShowJoin the Slow Looking Club Community on FacebookDownload the NEW resource - how to look at art (slowly)Curated newsletter by Claire BownArticles quoted on Intellectual Safety:Critical Communities: Intellectual Safety and the Power of Disagreement - Ashby Butnorhttps://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1005647.pdfThe Importance of Intellectually Safe Classrooms for Our Keiki - Trevor Baba https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1237572.pdf

How to Create Intellectual Comfort

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How to Create Intellectual Comfort
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