Title: Tourism system
1Tourism system
- Demand side of tourism
- Population (marketing)
- Supply side of tourism
- Information (promotion interpretation)
- Transportation
- Attractions resources
- Services
2What is interpretation?
- 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 of Interpretation, 2000
3What types of resources do we interpret?
- Historical
- Natural
- Cultural
- Recreational
- Industrial
- Artistic
4How is information interpreted?
- Interpreters
- Exhibits
- Signs
- Publications
- Recorded messages
- Video slide presentations
- WWW sites
- Radio transmissions
5Why is interpretation important to tourism?
- Increases the number of visitors.
- Increases length of stay of visitors.
- Increases tourism expenditures.
- Improves the quality of experience.
- Generates positive word-of-mouth advertising.
- Encourages return visits.
- Encourages resource preservation conservation!!
6Visitors remember approximately...
- 10 of what they hear
- 30 of what they read
- 50 of what they see
- 90 of what they do
- Use all five senses when possible!!
7Example
8(No Transcript)
9What are the purposes of interpretation?
- To expand a visitors awareness, understanding,
and appreciation of an area.
10What are the purposes of interpretation?
- To orient visitors to an area.
11What are the purposes of interpretation?
- To accomplish management objectives by
encouraging changes in visitor behaviors.
12What are the purposes of interpretation?
- To promote a visitors understanding of the goals
and objectives of organizations, agencies, and
communities.
13History of interpretation
- Enos Mills (1870-1922)
- The Adventures of a Nature Guide (1920)
- Freeman Tilden (1883-1980)
- Interpreting Our Heritage (1957)
14Tildens Interpretive Principles
- 1
- Interpretation should relate what is being
presented to something within the experience of
the visitor.
15Which catches your attention?
16Tildens Principles (continued)
- 2
- Information is not interpretation. Interpretation
is information based on revelation.
17Tildens Principles (continued)
- 3
- Interpretation is an art that combines many arts.
18What arts are involved?
Plymouth Plantations, MA
19What arts are involved?
National Bighorn Sheep Interpretive Center, WY
20Tildens Principles (continued)
- 4
- The chief aim of interpretation is not
instruction, but provocation.
21Why provocation?
22Tildens Principles (continued)
- 5
- Interpretation should aim to present a whole
rather than a part.
23Question
- What topic could we interpret from this photo?
24Solution
25Theme
- Definition
- The concept or idea which
- unifies the attractions and resources within an
area and - which you want visitors to leave with.
26Themes and subthemes
Subtheme 1
Subtheme 2
Theme
Subtheme 5
Subtheme 3
Subtheme 4
27Example Eastern Lake Ontario Dune Area
- Theme
- With a little understanding and care, the sand
dunes and wetlands of eastern Lake Ontario can be
preserved for both wildlife and people.
28Tildens Principles (continued)
- 6
- Interpretation addressed to children should
follow a fundamentally different approach than
that used for adults.
29Choosing interpretation for visitors
- People boating on the Erie Canal
- People biking along a bike route
- Residents visiting the Farm Museum in Eden
30Interpretation the 5 phases
- Anticipation planning
- Travelling to site
- Activities at site
- Travelling to home
- Recollection
31Homework
- Tildens Second Principle
- Information is not interpretation. Interpretation
is information based on revelation.