Monday, October 15, 2007
List your statewide event in the Community Calendar
A survey conducted by Reach Advisors in spring of 2007 asked 5,500 parents and grandparents what types of museums they visit with their families and why. The intent of the survey was to determine how relevant children's museums are to parents and children, if museums serve all of their community, when families start to visit other types of museums and whether or not the children's museum is perceived as a community hub.
| Family Attendance | |
| Age | Pattern | 2 a 4 | Art museum attendance declines | 5 a 7 | Science museum attendance increases | 8 a + | History museum attendance increases | *based on age of oldest child |
Culled from the responses of visitors and members of 33 U.S. children's museums, the results of this survey show what types of museums families visit and when they visit in their family life stage. General trends indicate that the age of the oldest child is the principal factor in what types of museums families visit.
An interesting finding of the survey is the benefit of a children's museum serving as a community hub. Museums that function as community hubs exhibit higher levels of membership, visitation, audience diversity, program income, community relevance and local financial support.
For museums who want to function as community hubs, James Chung of Reach Advisors suggests the following:
Source: Reach Advisors "Town Square...or Town Playground: The Relevance of Children's Museums in Today's World." Findings presented at the annual meeting of Association of Children's Museums (ACM), Chicago, May 2007.
For more information contact James Chung at Reach Advisors: james@reachadvisors.com