MEANINGFUL INTERPRETATION
How To Connect Hearts And Minds To Places, Objects, And Other Resources
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INTERPRET— "1. TO CLARIFY THE MEANING OF: ELUCIDATE:
2. TO EXPOUND THE SIGNIFICANCE OF.
3. TO REPRESENT THE MEANING OF THROUGH ART.
4. TO TRANSLATE."
—American Heritage Dictionary


FACILITATES A CONNECTION

Journal Questions:


How do you want your audiences to feel after your programs? (It might help to think about a specific program.)




"TO BE SUCCESSFUL ONE HAS TO LIVE WITH BELIEFS AS MUCH AS FACTS."
—William Markiewicz
YOUR COLLEAGUES SAID...
How do you want your audiences to feel after your programs?

"A sense of enjoyment, that it was time well spent."

"I want them to feel that the culture of south Louisiana is special and appreciate how the diversity of people and natural environment has shaped and made this possible."

"Like they have experienced something new, valuable, enjoyable, and worthwhile."

"Unsettled, and questioning their perceptions of history. I want them to be aware of more than one perspective on a past incident."

"Proud we've protected and saved the peregrine falcon."

"Enlightened, inspired, well-fed, but not stuffed."

"Energized in spirit. Delighted. Mentally and emotionally refreshed."

"Inspired and proud of the people who went through a difficult situation for what they believed in. To feel that the effort of the individuals in this event was worth the sacrifice and hardship."

"Hopeful, and empowered to change or to see other perspectives."

"I want them to feel they're in a special place. I hope they feel a sense of stewardship."

"Amazed. Startled, like they've just had a revelation they thought of themselves."

"Inspired. Wow — look what they did with so few tools."

"Enriched and possessing a secret that wants to be shared."

"I want to forget the program and remember the meanings of the resource."

Journal Questions:


What should audiences think after one of your programs?




"THERE ARE NO FACTS ONLY INTERPRETATIONS."
—Friedrich Nietzche
YOUR COLLEAGUES SAID...
What should audiences think after one of your programs?

"I'd like them to think like themselves — with a twist."

"I feel successful if I can make them think in any way that is new to them or beyond what they thought before the program."

"Perhaps question why they think the way they do."

"As a member or participant in the story."

"Culturally tolerant."

"That they are in charge, that their opinions and experiences count, that they are faced with choices (to not take action, take action, options)."

"This is important. This is meaningful. I want to bring my friends here."

"I want them to think along the lines of what they can do to help the resource."

"This is relevant to me."

"I want them to look at their lives in a different way and begin to realized all that was changed over time. Has it all been good? Would they change anything?"

"As stewards, not just users."

"I want them to think they have an effect on society."

"This place is cool. Learning can be fun. Rangers are neat."

"I want them to think like old-fashioned naturalists: observe, consider, be delighted."

"Great things can be experienced here."

"Wow — that was really interesting. Where can I learn more?"

Journal Questions:


Do you try to persuade audiences to value the resource the way you do?




"INFORMATION, AS SUCH, IS NOT INTERPRETATION. INTERPRETATION IS REVELATION BASED UPON INFORMATION. BUT THEY ARE ENTIRELY DIFFERENT THINGS. HOWEVER, ALL INTERPRETATION INCLUDES INFORMATION."
—Freeman Tilden
YOUR COLLEAGUES SAID...
Do you try to persuade audiences to value the resource the way you do?

"I hope my passion leads them to a greater appreciation or provokes curiosity. But the audience can only value the resource in their own way."

"Persuasion in its truest form is the job of politicians and marketers. We should only persuade people to engage, think, decide, choose, and act."

"The job of interpretation is to reveal meaning, not dictate thought."

"Value the resource — Yes, not necessarily the way I do. Its value must come from what it means to the visitor — not to me. I've seen interpreters try to make visitors mirrors of themselves but that's wrong."

"It's not a monologue. It's a dialogue that we share. I have persuaded without realizing it. I just had an objective and pushed it."

"Interpretation shouldn't insist on only one point of view, but explore more ways of seeing things. Some interpreters have tried to persuade and it has worked sometimes."

"Sort of. We have a mission and that effects our interpretation."

"In a way, yes. But I realize that persuasion is not a polemic and that the audience may not value the resource for the same reasons I do."

"I don't think it's my job to persuade, but I do want to provoke visitors to consider the choices they have. If my logic is sound, they may choose as I have."

"For a lasting impression they need their own connection, not mine."

"Persuading suggests that you have the right answer which is not as respectful as understanding, valuing and validating the range of perspectives people hold."

"The visitor didn't come to be forced to believe anything. They came because they wanted to somehow connect with the site."

"I only hope to persuade the audience to value the resource, in whatever way."


TENET 3
INTERPRETATION FACILITATES A CONNECTION BETWEEN THE MEANINGS OF THE RESOURCE AND THE INTERESTS OF THE VISITOR

sketch of tree


ASSIGNMENT

Watch Part 3 of the video, Facilitates a Connection, or read Section Three of the text, An Interpretive Dialogue.

Journal Questions:


What is the difference between an opportunity for a connection and a connection?




"OUR HERITAGE AND IDEALS, OUR CODES AND STANDARDS — THE THINGS WE LIVE BY AND TEACH OUR CHILDREN — ARE PRESERVED OR DIMINISHED BY HOW FREELY WE EXCHANGE IDEAS AND FEELINGS."
—Walt Disney


"THE INTERPRETIVE PRESENTATION IS SUCCESSFUL AS A CATALYST IN CREATING AN OPPORTUNITY FOR THE AUDIENCE TO FORM THEIR OWN INTELLECTUAL AND EMOTIONAL CONNECTIONS WITH THE MEANINGS/SIGNIFICANCE INHERENT IN THE RESOURCE..."
— National Park Service Interpretive Development Program. Stem Statement One, Core Interpretive Rubric

sketch

Think of connections in two ways. Interpreters present opportunities for connections to resource meanings. Audiences make personal connections to resource meanings by adding to, subtracting from, and transforming opportunities for connections. Opportunities should lead to connections, but they are distinct entities.


"INTERPRETATION IS A COMMUNICATION PROCESS THAT FORGES EMOTIONAL AND INTELLECTUAL CONNECTIONS BETWEEN THE INTERESTS OF THE AUDIENCE AND THE INHERENT MEANINGS IN THE RESOURCE."
— National Association For Interpretation, Definition Of Interpretation

Opportunities for Emotional and Intellectual Connections to the Meanings of the Resource

Visitors filter and respond to opportunities for connections through subjective beliefs, backgrounds, and circumstances. Successful interpretive products intentionally present both intellectual and emotional opportunities to provoke people who connect differently with resource meanings.

The Oxford English Dictionary (1989)
Emotional — "Connected with, based upon, or appealing to the feelings or passions."

Intellectual — "Of or belonging to the intellect or understanding."

Audience Connections to the Meanings of the Resource

The Oxford English Dictionary (1989) defines connection as "the condition of being related to something else by a bond of interdependence, causality, logical sequence, coherence or the like; relation between things one of which is bound up with, or involved in, another."

People who make personal connections to the resource experience a change in their emotions, intellect, or both. When an interpretive experience successfully facilitates personal connections to resource meanings the audience forms a personal bond with the resource, its meanings act upon them and they value the resource more.

sketch



Implications of TENET 3
MEANINGS ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN INFORMATION


Successful interpreters use accurate and comprehensive information but convey more than facts. If information and learning were the primary goal of most visitors, they would never need to visit. Audiences want something more. They seek meaningful experiences.

Some interpreters feel obligated to provide audiences with specific information. Many sites have strong traditions, "This is what we're supposed to say." It's more effective to challenge habit and ask "What will be meaningful to audiences in the time they have to spend?"

Society often measures success by the amount of information an individual absorbs, so it's natural to feel the audience needs the whole story. But if the audience needs the whole story there is a problem. All the details and bits of information can overwhelm and few people retain information they don't care about.

An oft-told joke illustrates: Asking an interpreter a question is like drinking from a fire-hose.

All that volume and power inflicts interpretation on visitors, good-tempered and otherwise, and prevents them from making their own connections to the meanings of the resource.

sketch of tree

Journal Questions:


How do you react when a visitor asks, "I've only got half an hour, what should I see?"




What is your answer if they only have two hours? Be specific about your resource.




What is your answer if they have two days? Again, be specific.



Behind the Question

It's easy to get frustrated when visitors ask what to see, especially if they only have a short time. It's hard to know their interests and it's insulting to think the resource can be appreciated so quickly. Interpreters invest a lot of work and care and know that the resource deserves quality time and attention.

There's more to their question, however. The visitor who makes this inquiry is actually offering a moment of their lives and trusting the interpreter to guide them to a meaningful experience. They may seem awkward and demanding, but they want to connect. The challenge is to quickly discover what experience will be meaningful.

It's easy to ask, "What interests you?," but likely the visitor won't know enough to give a meaningful reply. Prepare a full menu of responses — responses that suggest an experience for the period requested and that evoke feedback from the visitor. At a history site the response might start, "Well, historians usually agree the most significant spot is..." Natural history interpreters might refer to the most beautiful or rare. The skill is to watch for the visitor's reaction. Did they ask a follow-up question? If not, be ready with an alternative. "Do you have children? Do they need some fun?" If the answer is yes, be able to provide the appropriate experience.

There are a multitude of possibilities. The more thinking and planning such responses receive, the more visitors will connect to the resource.

EXERCISE
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Think again about audience motives. Create a series of specific questions and statements for different visitor encounters — the reception desk, auditorium, exhibits, and gathering points — or in response to often-asked questions or comments. Craft these with the intent of provoking the audience about the resource. Choose words carefully. Provide an opportunity for a connection to meaning in a sentence or two or maybe with a question.

What does the resource mean to audiences?

Have you ever asked an audience:

  • What do you know about this place?

  • Why did you visit?

  • What are you interested in?

  • "What would you like your children to take from their experience here?

  • What does this place, event, feature, artifact mean to you?

The answers received can help provide opportunities for emotional and intellectual connections to resource meanings that are relevant to the audience's interests.

park visitor
VISITOR AT A WAYSIDE EXHIBIT: NATIONAL PARK SERVICE HISTORIC PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION


"LIFE IS A SERIES OF LEAPING SPARKS. ALL THE REST IS INTERPRETATION."
—Loren Eiseley


Implication of TENET 3
Interpreters must channel their own understandings, enthusiasm, passion, and love for the resource so their audiences can form their own understandings, enthusiasm, passion, and love for the resource.

sketch of tree

Journal Questions:


What responsibility does the word facilitate imply for interpreters?




FACILITATE — "TO FREE FROM DIFFICULTIES OR OBSTACLES; MAKE EASIER; AID; ASSIST."
—American Heritage Dictionary
YOUR COLLEAGUES SAID...
What responsibility does the word facilitate imply for interpreters?

"We provide choices."

"Interpretation reveals meanings without dictating thought. Facilitation allows for an exchange of ideas and feelings."

"Interpreters provide access to meanings. We are the vehicle rather than the message."

"Don't get in the way."

"Interpreters have to know the meanings of the resource and about the audience."

"I have to overcome my biases to help others make their own connections."

"Interpreters must respect the fine line between persuading and presenting multiple points of view."


"A TEACHER WHO MAKES HIMSELF PROGRESSIVELY UNNECESSARY."
—Thomas Caruthers

park visitors
FLOYD PLATEAU: NATIONAL PARK SERVICE HISTORIC PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION


"IF FACTS ARE THE SEEDS THAT LATER PRODUCE KNOWLEDGE AND WISDOM, THEN THE EMOTIONS AND THE IMPRESSIONS OF THE SENSES ARE THE FERTILE SOIL IN WHICH THE SEEDS MUST GROW...ONCE THE EMOTIONS HAVE BEEN AROUSED — A SENSE OF THE BEAUTIFUL, THE EXCITEMENT OF THE NEW AND THE UNKNOWN, A FEELING OF SYMPATHY, PITY, ADMIRATION, OR LOVE — THEN WE WISH FOR KNOWLEDGE ABOUT THE OBJECT OF OUR EMOTIONAL RESPONSE. ONCE FOUND, IT HAS LASTING MEANING."
—Rachel Carson

One of the best ways to provoke passion for the resource is by linking multiple resource meanings to multiple audience points of view. This allows for:

  • Greater relevance. More of the audience is able to find elements of interest and value in the resource.

  • Greater provocation. More meanings and perspectives allow for more "I never thought of that before!" moments.

  • An environment of respect. An environment that promotes opportunities for listening and dialogue.

Journal Questions:


What put you on the road to becoming an outreach professional? What influenced you to become an interpreter? List and describe catalysts that contributed to your attitudes or stewardship. Catalysts can be people, books, events, courses, places, trips, organizations, etc.




Would you have the same passion for the resource now without the experiences and influences you described?




Have you ever tried to give visitors a shortcut to passion for the resource by sharing your own significant and meaningful experiences? If so, describe the moment. To what degree did your experiences help them make personal connections?



EXERCISE
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Consider one of your programs or one of a colleague. Be specific. How and where does the program provide opportunities for emotional connections? How and where does the program provide opportunities for intellectual connections? What resource meanings do the opportunities for connections address?


"WE ARE DEALING WITH THE INEFFABLE HERE — WE'RE OUT THERE SOMEWHERE BETWEEN THE KNOWN AND THE UNKNOWN, TRYING TO REEL IN BOTH FOR A CLOSER LOOK."
—Anne Lamott



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Last Updated: 29-May-2008

Meaningful Interpretation
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