Zooplantman
Well-Known Member
Many zoo education and exhibit departments (museum folks too) do or contract to have done post exhibit evaluations to measure whether the visitors got the message. And yes, in many instances they are understanding basic science and something of the conservation issues.
What I am unsure of is whether it really matters to conservation whether a nice family from Ohio or Amsterdam understands that biodiversity matters and that Javan rhinos are disappearing.
What are the things a zoo visitor can really do?
Stop having children and teach their kids to not have kids
Radically reduce their consumption of resources, consumer products of all kinds
Radically reduce their consumption of energy
Give serious financial support to conservation NGOs
Bombard their Federal representatives with emails and letters supporting conservation priorities
Actively boycott and speak out against nations with inadequate conservation records
But in general, exhibit signage asks little of the visitor. Much is said but nothing is asked.
I know you have written about wanting to promote giraffe conservation, so I can ask you: what concrete actions do you need that family to take and how would you spell it out clearly for them?
What I am unsure of is whether it really matters to conservation whether a nice family from Ohio or Amsterdam understands that biodiversity matters and that Javan rhinos are disappearing.
What are the things a zoo visitor can really do?
Stop having children and teach their kids to not have kids
Radically reduce their consumption of resources, consumer products of all kinds
Radically reduce their consumption of energy
Give serious financial support to conservation NGOs
Bombard their Federal representatives with emails and letters supporting conservation priorities
Actively boycott and speak out against nations with inadequate conservation records
But in general, exhibit signage asks little of the visitor. Much is said but nothing is asked.
I know you have written about wanting to promote giraffe conservation, so I can ask you: what concrete actions do you need that family to take and how would you spell it out clearly for them?
Maybe the real need is to ask the general public this: What would it take to have you make conservation of wild places and wild species a priority in your life: more important than the latest iPhone, more important than replacing your 3-year old car, more important than your gym membership, more important than having a second child?I think figuring out whether zoo conservation education efforts are effective, and if not, how to try and improve them, is really important and would like to retrain myself as a social scientist to do this research if nobody else is doing it...
Last edited: