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Interpreting National Park Settings Is a Skill, Not Something You Wing

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Published Date

June 6, 2010

Ranger Lisa Free interprets backwoods life at Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Danny Bernstein photo.

Editor's note: Interpretation in national park settings can't be taken for granted. While some is provided by full-time rangers with degrees in specific fields that they interpret, much also is provided by volunteers who are schooled during a week-long program in how to interpret. Contributing writer Danny Bernstein is volunteering this summer at Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and recently went through a course on interpreting. Here's what she learned.

In National Park Service lingo, interpretation is the process of providing each visitor an opportunity to personally connect with a place. We interpret for the visitor informally when we talk to them in the visitor center or on the trail and formally when we give a program.

Informal Contact

Mike Meldrum, an interpretive ranger at Cades Cove, talked about enhancing the visitor experience. The visitor wants to know "What's in it for me!" and that's what we have to answer.

Visitor contact is highly personalized. An interpreter (ranger or volunteer) must be able to evaluate the visitor and use a "well-crafted response," a visitor-centered approach. Much like Disneyworld, we're in the business of exceeding expectations. We heard several audio quotes from Michael Eisner, former head of Disneyworld. Ranger Meldrum loves Disneyworld and goes there every year. "You need to be committed and passionate," he says. "You're like a Jehovah's Witness with a day job."

Earlier this year, I wrote a piece for the Traveler on marketing the parks like Disneyworld and received many heated responses, but here Ranger Meldrum was applying Disney techniques to the park, not trying to market the Great Smokies like Disneyland. To accomplish that, he explained, we need to:

* Make eye contact and smile

* Greet and welcome every visitor

* Seek out visitors and ask "Can I help you?"

* Use appropriate body language

* Preserve the positive visitor experience

* Thank each visitor for coming to the park

* Not engage in personal conversation with other park personnel when visitors are around.

The National Park Service has even developed a visitors' bill of rights. Visitors have a right to:

* Have their privacy and independence respected.

* Retain and express their own values.

* Be treated with courtesy and consideration.

* Receive accurate and balanced information.

Ranger Meldrum reminded us that, "Visitors are always watching you. So if you have a uniform, be careful. You're on stage."

Appalachian Stereotypes

At Great Smoky Mountains National Park, an obvious issue is that of stereotyping. Kent Cave, Sugarlands supervisory interpretive ranger, grew up in Eastern Tennessee and is well-versed in Appalachian stereotypes. Visitors may come to the park with one of two stereotypes of Southern Appalachian residents. One is the inbred, moon-shining, barefoot hillbilly. To create that image, Ranger Kent first played a video about a moonshiner called MOONSHINE with Jim Tom Hendricks (). It was hilarious.

The next documentary, The True Meaning of Pictures by Shelby Lee Adams was not funny, but rather was intended to be disturbing. Mr. Adams is accused of perpetuating stereotypes. A photographer and videographer, he often aims for the house at the top of a hollow to find the most isolated families. We saw a short clip of an old woman smoking a pipe and a family with several handicapped children with the strong hint that these folks were inbred.

The second stereotype of Southern Appalachian is that of the self-made man, the "Hell of a Fellow," the Daniel Boone mountain-man-type embodied in Sergeant York, with Gary Cooper. The movie is based on a true story about Alvin York, from the hills of Tennessee, who becomes the most decorated soldier in World War I.

But a third type of visitor thinks that the national park was plopped here by the federal government and has nothing to do with the people around the park. They'll ask, "Why were so many Civil War battles fought in National Parks?" and "Was the Cherokee Indian Reservation placed close to the national park so they could get more tourists?"

As interpreters, part of our job is to dispel the stereotypes and focus on the actual history.

Costumed Interpretation

The Smokies was home to more than 200 communities before the landscape was transformed into a national park. Therefore, interpreters enjoy getting into costumes and talking about former residents. To learn how to do that, we walked to the Ownby Cabin on a nature trail at the back of Sugarlands Visitor Center. Ranger Lisa Free, dressed as Mary Ownby who lived in the cabin over 100 years ago, was weaving a basket.

We were supposed to find problems with her setting. Some were very easy. There was a plastic water bottle close by. Ranger Free wore modern sneakers and used scissors and a screw driver with plastic handles. Other inconsistencies were not so obvious. In the photograph above, Ranger Free has rolled up her sleeves above her elbows. Just like many religious women, showing your elbows is a no, no.

Ranger Free started out by doing a first person interpretation, i.e. playing the character, also called Living History. But that's not done much in the Smokies. There's not enough training in this technique and it makes it tough to answer visitor questions when the interpreter can't break character. Instead, Ranger Free quickly switched to third-person where she could talk about the owners of the house and the times. It's easier to interact with visitors in the third person. The ranger feels a strong sense of responsibility to respect the former residents by getting the details right.

Formal Programs

If you sign up for a program in any national park, you'll follow a ranger or volunteer as she or he casually talks about what you're seeing.

But the program is not put together casually. It's the result of setting out themes, goals, and objective for what ends up being an hour's walk. This interpretive program needs to be "place based," i.e., it can't be done anyplace else. Then a supervisor has to approve the details and maybe dry run it. This all sounds like creating a lesson plan for elementary school teaching. The only difference is there's no formal assessment; visitors are not going to take a test. Somewhere in the National Park Service, educators and interpreters work on these guidelines, and there are Ph.D. dissertations on Park interpretation.

Mike Maslona, supervisory interpretive ranger at Cades Cove who led this session, enjoys acronyms. To start, he had EIEIO. In another order, EIEIO becomes:

* Orient the visitor - Where is the bathroom?

* Inform the visitor - How many bears are there in the park?

* Educate - More deeply than just inform with the facts

* Enlighten - Beyond education

* Instill - Instill stewardship

The concept of stewardship, to preserve and protect for future generations, is a holy word. We need to make visitors feel that the park resources, mountains, bison, Liberty Bell, Civil War artifacts, cabin, are their resources. So we need to inspire more than just educate with dry facts. Rather we need to imbue our programs with internal meanings so that visitors can see connections and want to protect the resources. This is a very optimistic view of the world - just educate and people will protect the parks and not litter, harass a bear or carve their names on a cabin.

Interpretation goes beyond just a lecture and uses appropriate techniques such as question and answers, old photographs, quotes, audience participation, jokes and even silence. "When you get to a waterfall, let the resource talk to the visitor."

In designing our program, we might start with a tangible item - thing, place, or event - and then connect it to intangible meanings - old, utilitarian, home. An old-fashioned hand bell could be a dinner bell, cow bell, school bell or a garden bell to warn the gardener that a bear was in the garden.

To build on those tangible objects and their roles, Ranger Maslona introduced his wife's favorite movie, The Wizard of Oz. From the characters, he explained, we can hone various aspects of our program.

* Scarecrow wanted a brain. So we need information.

* Tin Man wanted a heart. We have to have an emotional connection with our subject.

* Lion wanted courage - We give visitors opportunities to do things they wouldn't do by themselves, like walk a trail or canoe a creek.

* Dorothy wanted home - Make a connection between what visitors knows (home) and what they experience in the park.

* Wizard - That's us presenting a program.

Presentations

After an interpretive walk to Cataract Falls behind Sugarlands Visitor Center, we each gave a 3-5 minute version of a potential program. The programs ranged from the night sky to Cades Cove as a state of mind, fishing, cooking at the Mountain Farm Museum, and bird songs.

The presentations, in fact all the sessions, were really geared to seasonal rangers and interns, the folks in college or right out of college. I was very impressed with the group. Putting aside my park volunteer hat for a while and looking at them from the perspective of a retired college professor, I noted that they were all prepared, eager and not afraid to show how excited they were about this opportunity to work in the Smokies this summer. They were not interested in mixing with volunteers, maybe because we were so much older than they were. The seasonals were in their early 20s and most of the volunteers were past 50s, and maybe we reminded them of their parents.

Most seasonal rangers had not come from academically selective universities or majored in forestry, subjects most associated with working for the National Park Service. But these newcomers obviously had tremendous drive, ambition, and the willingness to plan ahead. And that will carry them forward more than the prestige of the college they attended. I wish them well!

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Comments

It is the people of the NPS that really make the parks what they are. They work tirelessly to describe and add value and meaning to the beauty of the parks. They tell the stories and help us connect with history and nature.

I am always amazed when I visit a park at how much the interpreters, many times volunteers, care about the parks and how passionately they sharing their knowledge with anyone who takes the time to listen.


such an interesting information for us learning guides....hope to find more interesting articles from you.


I don't think Danny has posted anything else on here for a long time but she has a great book and has an active Facebook page.


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