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  • 1.  Studies on Field Trip Group Sizes

    Posted 06-21-2018 06:00 PM
    Hello All!

    I am working on a report regarding our field trip visitation over the course of the past five years. We have gradually restricted the number of students allowed to visit for a single field trip in order to create smaller group sizes for our volunteer educators. Our program has improved dramatically and our volunteer retention has also improved! For this report I am referencing studies on elementary classroom sizes but have not found anything specific to museums and field trips. Any ideas you can send my way?

    Thank you!

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    Megan Poole
    Program Coordinator
    Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum
    Colorado Springs CO
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  • 2.  RE: Studies on Field Trip Group Sizes

    Posted 06-22-2018 11:39 AM
    Sounds like a good research project. Variables include staff size (including volunteers), fragility of items on exhibit, exhibit layout, square footage of classroom / gallery space, program supplies, and more. I'm assuming your focus is student, not adult groups. I used to work in a museum that accommodates 120 students without blinking. Our Interpretive Center exhibit gallery comfortably holds 30 at one time without resorting to starting some at the end of the gallery and others at the beginning. Our log cabin accommodates a dozen visitors.

    We juggle groups by having options for two to three different simultaneous activities - one for each class (up to 31 students). That gives us a maximum capacity of 90 students (and the cabin is not part of that program). Sure, we can put 100 on the fossil beds, but who's going to pay attention? With acres of bedrock, students run around like it's a gymnasium! With help from our trained volunteers, we can keep groups small and occupied. It makes for a high-quality program and avoiding burnout, two important goals.

    When we get requests for 95+ students, we ask them to split and do an activity elsewhere with half the group. (For instance, half come in the morning and the other mid-day.) Unfortunately, when we get requests for 120 students for a 2-hour visit, we must politely turn them down. Our facility cannot safely hold a huge group, not to mention our small staff size trying to keep them focused.

    It is important to establish a group capacity that will avoid personnel burnout and problems from insufficient supervision. I think you are doing what works best for the Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum!

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    Alan Goldstein
    Interpretive Naturalist, CIP
    Falls of the Ohio State Park / Interpretive Center
    Clarksville IN
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  • 3.  RE: Studies on Field Trip Group Sizes

    Posted 06-23-2018 12:14 PM

    At T.C. Steele State Historic Site, we are surrounded by small and moderate-sized communities.  The closest large metropolitan area in Indianapolis.  While we do get groups from the Indianapolis area, most are smaller charter, magnet or private schools.  Locally, we often have teachers schedule tours for all the 3rd (the year they study "community") or 4th-graders (the year they study state history) at a time, with a maximum of 120 children at a time.  Any group larger than that, we tell them they must split into morning or afternoon, or come on two different days.

    All groups of over 25 people are divided into smaller groups of 20-25.  Staff and volunteers take the individual smaller groups on a "round robin" of pre-set stations: different locations, different activities-often an art activity is included as one of the stations since T.C. Steele was an impressionist landscape painter-so each group gets to see and do everything, just in a different order.  This works for us because we have several buildings as well as trails, historic gardens, and a nature preserve to provide a variety of experiences.  Our biggest challenge, since the staff is small, is being able to schedule enough staff members and volunteers to handle all the stations plus the office and regular visitors who arrive while the school field trip is in progress.

     

     

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    Andrea deTarnowsky
    Historic Site Manager

    T.C. Steele State Historic Site
    adetarnowsky@indianamuseum.org

    P:  812.988.2785

     

     

    4220 T.C. Steele Road

    Nashville Indiana 47448

    www.indianamuseum.org/t-c-steele-state-historic-site

     

     

     




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