As I walked through the California Science Center on Friday, I had a very different perspective than the one I had when I visited this museum on class field trips in elementary school. Perhaps it was because I did not have the sense of wonderment I had when I visited for the first time. Or perhaps it was because the museum’s target audience was children.
The air and space exhibits are probably the most formal displays of all. While the telescopes and space locomotives are beautifully displayed, they offered the visitors little, if any, interactions with the exhibits.
Moving on to the World of Life, I had a fun time learning about the human body. Next to each display, there were placards with just enough information to keep me interested long enough to finish reading the whole thing. I found this exhibit the most fascinating, although I may be biased because I love biology. There was a great amount of interactive objects, such as replicas of human organs, a body on an operating table in the surgery theatre, a drunk driving simulator, etc. I even went to the Body Works show where there was a 50 ft automaton that attempted to simplify the process of homeostasis. Clearly, these displays were oriented toward children so they can learn in an entertaining yet informative way.
In the Creative World, I explored the Communications place, which showed how people communicated over the years. Near the back, I played with the earthquake simulator, in which I built mini structures to see if they can withstand any seismic activity. Needless to say, they could not.
Finally I visited the third floor. There was not much going on besides the Pompeii exhibit, which I did not want to pay to see. I checked out the transportation displays in the Creative World. Like the other exhibits, there were many interactive displays, such as sail racing, solar powered/electric cars, and a driving simulator, which unfortunately did not work when I was there.















