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Dr.
Goéry Delacôte |
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Renowned French scientist, science educator, and public
servant Goéry Delacôte served as the Exploratorium’s
Executive Director from 1991 until 2005. Dr. Delacôte
holds a Ph.D. in solid-state physics from the École
Normale Supérieure in Paris. He has been involved
in science and science education since the outset of his
career.
Before coming to the Exploratorium, Dr. Delacôte
was Director of the Science and Technology Information
Division of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
(CNRS) in Paris, France. There, he was responsible for
the creation, design, and implementation of the INIST Group,
the national research library of France.
In 1979, Dr. Delacôte assembled a scientific team
to create La Villette, a national science and technology
museum that opened in Paris in 1986. From 1985 to 1991,
he served as Chair of the Board of Directors and of the
Scientific Council of the French National Institute of
Pedagogical Research (INRP).
Dr. Delacôte is the author of Savoir Apprendre (“Knowing
How to Learn”), published in French, which focuses
on education reform in France and the United States. The
book shares its title with a French nonprofit organization
founded in 1997 by Dr. Delacôte with the object of
creating a mini-Exploratorium in France, called the Exploradome.
During
his tenure as Executive Director of the Exploratorium,
Dr. Delacôte worked toward extending the reach of
the museum through networking—increasing outreach,
expanding teacher professional-development programs, creating
an expanded Web presence, and supporting the formation
of museum partnerships in the U.S. and abroad. In addition
to expanding the museum’s facilities at the nearby
Presidio National Park, he concentrated efforts on the
redevelopment of major exhibition areas, guiding the activity
of the museum into new areas of interest, including the
important domains of research in life sciences and cognition.
As part of creating a "networked" Exploratorium,
Dr. Delacôte focused not only on bringing the Exploratorium
to the world, but also on bringing the world to the Exploratorium.
In the words of Dr. Delacôte, "The very essence
of an informal science center is the daily challenge of
making the fundamentals of science as accessible to as
many people as possible."
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