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Article

Spanish Archaeological Museums during COVID-19 (2020): An Edu-Communicative Analysis of Their Activity on Twitter through the Sustainable Development Goals

Department of Specific Didactics, Faculty of Education, University of Zaragoza, Calle de Pedro Cerbuna, 12, 50009 Zaragoza, Spain
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Sustainability 2020, 12(19), 8224; https://doi.org/10.3390/su12198224
Submission received: 22 September 2020 / Revised: 1 October 2020 / Accepted: 2 October 2020 / Published: 6 October 2020

Abstract

:
On 18 March 2020, Spanish museums saw their in-person activities come to a halt. This paradigm shift has raised questions concerning how these institutions reinvented themselves and modified their edu-communicative strategies to promote heritage through active citizen participation. The present study centers on analyzing how the main Spanish archaeological museums and sites (N = 254) have used Twitter as an edu-communicative tool and analyzes the content of their hashtags through a mixed methodology. The objective is to identify the educational strategies for both transmitting information as well as interacting with users. We did it by observing and analyzing if Spanish archaeological institutions are promoting a type of quality, accessible, and egalitarian education and promoting the creation of cyber communities that ensure the sustainability of heritage through citizen participation. This paper proposes an innovative assessment of communication on Twitter based on the purpose of messages from the viewpoint of heritage education, their r-elational factor, and predominant type of learning. The main findings reveal a significant increase in Twitter activity, both in quantitative and qualitative terms: educational content is gaining primacy over the simple sharing of basic information and promotional content. The networks forge new ways to teach–learn and interact with media and represent a strong channel to promote the sustainability of heritage, its preservation, and appreciation.

1. Introduction

The breakneck speed at which digital society and culture have advanced over the last 20 years has given rise to various new areas of research, such as the study of digital edu-communication, which has proven itself to be fundamental for life-long and non-formal learning. In parallel, heritage education has evolved from being entirely focused on the physical and material towards also being engaged with the virtual [1]. The use of social media has given way to new educational possibilities through a type of user interaction that is both accessible and massive. As a result, it is now possible to interact with heritage sites from anywhere in the world [2].
In recent years, edu-communication on social networks has become a mainstay for a wide array of institutions to exchange and share content [3], leading to an ideal context for the better appreciation of culture [4] and heritage education [1,5]. The digital realm is well disposed to the open and flexible creation of knowledge-forming processes as well as the understanding, appreciation, awareness, and enjoyment of cultural heritage. All of this makes social networks a potentially educative medium within a larger global context [6,7] that offers us an opportunity for citizen participation. Accordingly, a range of studies have analyzed the extent to which digital environments democratize, educate, and socialize heritage [8,9,10]. Digital learning is a process that is not subject to normal restrictions and has changed the rules of the game, providing new communication tools and spaces for interaction [1,11]. In this vein, social networks have emerged as powerful instruments and platforms for museums to communicate on a massive scale with their publics [12,13,14,15,16,17], even becoming publication spaces for these institutions [18] and forging new inter-institutional relationships as a part of trends in online communication [19] allowing us to educate, raise awareness, and value the wealth of heritage and its necessary conservation to promote the sustainability of our legacy.
All these elements of analysis are framed within some of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals. Specifically, this research aims to analyze whether in Goal 4, “Guarantee inclusive, equitable and quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all”, institutions are providing the tools to achieve “an education that fosters sustainable development and sustainable lifestyles, human rights, gender equality, the promotion of a culture of peace and non-violence, world citizenship and the appreciation of cultural diversity and the contribution of culture to sustainable development, etc.” (Target 4.7) [20]. Finally, this study also tries to analyze whether in Goal 11, “Make cities more inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable”, the Spanish institutions analyzed have tried to “redouble their efforts to protect and safeguard cultural and natural heritage of the world” (Target 11.4) [21]. In this sense, the necessary reinvention of culture is underlined and with it the self-management systems that make its sustainability possible, as well as awareness and commitment to the content they promote, knowledge of the goods, and the necessary care for the preservation of its wealth and its transmission from generation to generation [22].
The heritage-based edu-communicative strategies used by museums constitutes an emerging field of research within which the present study focuses on the collection of Spanish archaeological and open-air museums and these institutions’ use of Twitter. This platform has been identified as a fruitful area of study due to its ability to foster multi-directional communication about topics of interest that are clearly marked and searchable through the use of hashtags. Archaeological museums can be included among the larger group of museums that count on the greatest number of digital resources, reconstructions, augmented reality, and virtual reality tools as well as virtual visits [1]. That said, it remains necessary to conduct an in-depth study of how archaeological museums use online resources to foster edu-communicative processes and create knowledge. The present paper takes significant steps towards addressing this issue.

2. Materials and Methods

In light of previous analyses concerning the possible advantages of social networks for heritage education [2,23,24], it has been determined that a hashtag on Twitter, which is linked to specific educational content and is used in a periodic or regular fashion (for example, on a weekly basis or even more frequently), can enjoy substantial diffusion and be combined with other communicative strategies for piquing user interest and ultimately leading to meaningful learning. Even if current society is characterized by a desire for the immediate, ephemeral trends and impatience [25], Twitter is well-equipped to generate group discussions about concrete issues, which, if they reach a large enough audience, become trending topics that are identified with specific hashtags [26]. The present study analyses the content tied to the most notable hashtags used by archaeological museums during the health crisis unleashed by COVID-19. It does so through a reflection on hashtags’ educative goal, possibility of encouraging participation, exchange, and learning opportunities that are offered by museums and the presence of messages that explicitly or implicitly promote the sustainability of the heritage. Therefore, this paper seeks to answer the following research questions: What are the forms of educational interaction that museum communication departments are offering on twitter? What strategies and contents are they using to stimulate a multidirectional edu-communication?
This study fits into a larger ongoing line of research concerning the role of cultural institutions on Twitter and/or other social media platforms, which has been underway since 2012 [13,27,28]. This research has also produced recent doctoral dissertations [29,30,31] that offer new models for analyzing content and use research standards in the field that had previously only been discussed theoretically. The methodological focus of this research is based in the didactic-contextual genealogy of heritage [32,33] and in the processes of interpretation, communication, and diffusion of heritage [34,35].

2.1. Objetives and Research Questions

The main objective of the present study is to analyze the Twitter activity of Spanish archaeological and open-air museums during the lockdown resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic and whether this activity enables the fulfillment of some of the objectives for sustainable development related to education and heritage. Within this larger umbrella, there are the following specific objectives (SO):
SO1.
To quantify the activity generated on Twitter by Spanish archaeological and open-air museums over the last several years.
SO2.
To compare the participation of institutions in #MuseumWeek 2020 with the level of participation in previous years.
SO3.
To identify different edu-communicative proposals through an analysis of museums’ use of hashtags with a clear focus on each message’s purpose, the relational factor, and predominant type of learning.
Therefore, the present study answers the following research questions: What is the current state of Spanish archaeological and open-air museums’ Twitter activity? Has the physical closure of museums led to a greater effort on museums’ part to participate in concrete initiatives such as #MuseumWeek? Has the lockdown led to new 2.0 communicative strategies that demonstrate the viability of edu-communicative projects requiring online participation? Is heritage sustainability promoted through social media?

2.2. Sample

The sample for this study was gathered from the information catalogued on the Directory of Museums and Collections of Spain, which is available on the Ministry of Culture and Sport’s website. The keywords “arqueológico” and “de sitio” were used to search the list by topic and yielded an initial sample of 254 different institutions. From this larger list, a search was conducted to determine which institutions had an official Twitter account. This search brought the sample down to 59 (i.e., 23.2% of the original list) institutions that had profiles clearly marked as officially belonging to the institution.
The next selection criterion was the level of institutions’ Twitter activity. Only 31 institutions had profiles that showed at least one example of an activity that was sufficiently constant and planned. This selection criterion was determined with a minimum number of posts over a certain period of time: 3 to 5 tweets a week that contained the institution’s own content. Only 12.2% of all Spanish archaeological institutions have an official Twitter account whose activity can be characterized as planned, constant, and possibly of value in edu-communicative terms.
Finally, from this reduced sample, the study only took into account hashtags that were used by institutions in at least 40 tweets. This quantity of tweets (i.e., 40) require a good and consistent management of a hashtag, given that it would have been used approximately 3 to 5 times a week during the lockdown. Furthermore, this volume allows us to speak in terms of a broad and consistently used edu-communicative process, which can be found using the platform’s search tools and subsequently analyzed in terms of the public’s response over a period of time would elude to the sort of one-off events that have become so characteristic on the web 2.0 [36].
In total, 213,571 tweets have been analyzed. These come from 31 different institutions, which have been active on Twitter during the last 5 years. We have identified a total activity in which only 52,408 (24.5%) tweets reflect an institution’s own original communication with at least one hashtag.

2.3. Analytic Instrument: Heritage Education, R-elational Factor, and Learning Proposal

The first phase of research, which was part of a broader project, consisted in creating a research tool that could be used to classify the edu-communicative processes of museums on Twitter. This research instrument focused on three fundamental pillars: first, the procedural sequence for heritage education [33]; second, the so-called r-elational factor, which has been recently formulated in several studies [37,38]; third, the predominant type of learning in educational terms [39]. In addition, other articles that discuss important aspects of the theory of heritage-based edu-communication have been taken into account [1,32,35].
The first pillar analyses tweets from the viewpoint of heritage education and identifies five different goals for a tweet [33]: (1) transmission is when the tweet is purely informative, providing objective facts about a piece; (2) participation is when the institution launches a project that requires followers to participate or collaborate; (3) comprehension/reflection is when the an institution shares an image, update, or video that asks suggestive questions and foments reflection that can lead a user to develop his/her own critical idea; (4) valuation is when an institution seeks to awaken the desire to protect and respect an object or site of value (either in material or immaterial terms) that is deemed at risk and has become the subject of public debate; finally, (5) enjoyment and transference is when an institution shares images, videos, updates (etc.) that can excite positive emotions.
The second pillar identifies the so-called “r-elational factor” of tweets [37], which is understood as the through line that connects use, consumption, and interaction between the online community and which makes it possible to move from ICTs (information and communication technologies) to RICTs (relations, information, and communication technologies) in which the relational aspect encourages users to analyze content, develop their own critical thinking abilities, as they look for new information and develop intellectually [40]. Within this factor, four different levels of relation can be distinguished: first and most common is when there is no attempt to form a connection between an institution and individual; the second is when interaction is only sought out through a question-and-response form through the use of surveys, open or closed questions, etc.; the third possibility requires reflection that results from the use of questions and when the user is asked to give his/her point of view with the institution serving as the catalyst for these reflections. The fourth possibility, which is the most fruitful and also happens to be the most difficult to achieve, requires cocreation that results from an institution proposing a transformative, creative, and collaborative activity whose final result is a new product that arises from users’ contributions. To give an example: an institution asks visitors for photographs from their visits or the institution proposes that users send photos or videos from home in which they imitate or replicate a work from the museum’s collection. Products of this type of relationship can be digital creations, creative interventions, reinterpretations, etc.
Finally, the third pillar centers on the predominant type of learning [39]. While it remains true that the majority of tweets are purely informative and/or promotional (this being a type of communication that is so rooted in all sorts of cultural institutions), we can nevertheless distinguish to a greater or lesser extent the influence of the four main learning theories on the type of learning that museums attempt to promote: behaviorism, cognitivism, constructivism, and connectivism, the final being directly linked to the emergence of ICTs and digital society.
To start, the method for data collection and analysis used analytical tools that measure activity on social media (in this case Twitter) [36]; this made it possible to analyze activity in quantitative terms, often including the total amount of Twitter activity from the time that an account was created; this analysis revealed instances of institutional profiles with low levels of activity. On the other hand, the study relied on a research instrument for analyzing heritage edu-communication on the web 2.0 (see Table 1), which is composed of three variables for analysis and 14 indicators. This instrument has been reviewed by a group of 12 experts in terms of suitability, clarity, coherence, and relevance [41]. This review phase resulted in various changes: the language used in several descriptors has been simplified; descriptors were eliminated that were thought to be repetitive or needed to be further subdivided; items for variable 1 were combined and descriptors 2.4 and 3.5 were added.

3. Results

3.1. Archaeological and Open-Air Museums in Numbers

In the first place, the analysis of the collected data centered on extracting all data dealing with the number of followers, the trajectory of social media activity, as well as the rate and type of production. On the one hand, the total frequency of publication (including tweets, retweets, and shared content) and the tweets generated by each institution among the group of 3200 collected by the data collection tool. Thus, it became possible to contextualize the amount of new content generated by each institution. This first analysis allowed for the identification of the time that each institution had spent on the publication of tweets that were gathered by the data collection tool and also for the identification of the most frequently used hashtags in order to classify their predominant purpose (see Table 2).
Identifying the most frequently used hashtags provided a significant sample concerning what strategies institutions have used on Twitter. In general, communication was based in the sharing of daily information (upcoming events, hours of operation, etc.) with a generic hashtag for publicizing the museum’s daily activities. This was the case with 23 (74.2%) of the most common hashtags analyzed in this study, compared with seven hashtags (23%) that sought to launch truly educational communication.
It is also noteworthy that the most frequent hashtags were those that were created during the lockdown, such as #EnCasaConMedina, #MANSiempreCerca, or #MuseudeMallorcaDesdecasa, all of which will be analyzed in the final section of this study and which reflect an amplification and transformation of edu-communication on the web 2.0, thanks to the greater availability of time on the part of museum and site staff for designing and sharing content online [42].

3.2. Comparative Analysis of Activity during #MuseumWeek between 2018 and 2020

To learn whether there was a notable increase in publications during the confinement, the present study analyzed MuseumWeek (with hashtag #MuseumWeek), which is an initiative that is celebrated across five different continents, is linked to International Museum Day, and enjoys a significant following on social media [43]. The initiative was spearheaded by the Culture for Causes Network (CFCN) in 2014 and has the support of UNESCO and the Foundation CHANEL (among others). The event is important for museums and is held annually during the second week of May. This fixed schedule allowed us to compare the topics and hashtags used by different institutions on Twitter over the seven days of MuseumWeek (see Table 3). Spanish museums began to include MuseumWeek in their annual calendars in 2016. The data demonstrate that those institutions that decided to participate do so in a planned manner, generating different “threads” (strings of tweets that are published consecutively so that a user can surpass Twitter’s limit on characters) about topics that the museum had settled on promoting.
During the 2020 event, which took place with the backdrop of the health crisis and the fact that a good portion of the planet was locked down at home, the chosen global theme was #togetherness. This choice was announced at the beginning of the year and, according to the official press release, sought to extend the mission of museums through online platforms in light of the challenges resulting from the health crisis [44]. In at least two of the seven proposals of #MuseumWeek, there was a call for users to share images (#MomentosMuseoMW and #CulturaEnCuarentenaMW). This final hashtag promoted an especially creative type of interaction: users were asked to use household objects to recreate works of art (following the previous proposal of the Getty Museum [45]) and had the biggest results. Among the other proposals ((#JuntosMW, #TecnologíaMW, #SueñosMW, and #HéroesMW), we ought to highlight the last one (#HéroesMW), since it engaged with the particular moment and context that overshadowed MuseumWeek, though it was not possible to observe any special significance of this hashtag for Spanish archaeological museums.
The analysis of the content of the tweets published during the last three years of #MuseumWeek by the institutions included in the present sample (n = 31) showed that not all museums participated in previous MuseumWeeks: 27 institutions did take part, though to different extents. Data confirm that lockdown conditions did not lead to a general increase in activity during MuseumWeek 2020 when compared to previous years (see Table 4).
The activity of several institutions stands out in particular: the Museu de la història i de la cultura de Mallorca, the Museo de Prehistoria de Valencia (MUPREVA), and the Museo Nacional de Arte Romano (MNAR), all of which had on average more than four tweets a day. In the first two cases, Twitter activity resembled that of previous years (or data on previous activity was unavailable), whereas in the case of the Museo Nacional de Arte Romano, the data showed an increase in activity as a result of the closure of the physical museum.
The activity of the remaining institutions that have been examined was quite similar to that of previous years, demonstrating that for these museums the activity had been planned and prepared as part of the institution’s annual social media strategy. Nevertheless, there are institutions that increased the number of published tweets (the Museo Arqueológico de Granada, the Museo de Altamira, and the Museo de Arqueología de Alicante (MARQ) or that participated in MuseumWeek for the first time (the Conjunto Arqueológico Baelo Claudia, the Museu Arqueològic d’Eivissa i Formentera (MAEF Museu), and the Museu de Badalona).
The reported numbers confirm that the Spanish archaeological and open-air museums that stand out for their constant and planned Twitter activity used MuseumWeek as a shared goal with the rest of the institutions that adapted the content of their collections to the topics and initiatives proposed by the larger organization. Furthermore, the health crisis made it possible for other institutions that had previously not participated (or that had not participated in recent years) to join in on the initiative.

3.3. Analysis of Content Related to Edu-Communicative 2.0 Strategies

The second portion of this study, which is a fundamental aspect of our larger research trajectory, entailed analyzing the content of the tweets published during the lockdown in order to identify tweets whose content contained a predominantly educative purpose or theme. These tweets were then analyzed to detect the type of edu-communication that archaeological and open-air museums were publishing.
In this phase of research, the research tool designed for analyzing edu-communicative strategies was used (see Table 1). The detailed analysis of the tweets’ content allowed us to determine the objective, r-elational factor, and type of interaction and ultimately learning that the institution sought to encourage among users. This analysis demonstrates the degree to which edu-communication is taking place and provides answers to the following questions: Was there a meaningful attempt to produce learning that went beyond the mere transmission of information? Was the r-elational factor present? Did museums partake in a process of patrimonialization, socialization, or symbolic identity formation through the use of archaeological heritage [46,47,48].
Table 5 lists the museums that used or created a hashtag in a planned way during the lockdown and also includes the 12 relevant hashtags from 10 different institutions. Additionally, the table includes the results of the classification of tweets according to variables V.1 (purpose of message), V.2 (r-elational factor and type of interaction encouraged among users), and V.3 (predominant learning theory of the proposals and messages), all of which were determined using the tool explained in Table 1.
First of all, it merits mention that of the 31 museums included in the sample (i.e., those that had been deemed sufficiently active in a previous phase of research), only 10 (32.2%) launched an activity that was designed and planned during the lockdown. Among these 10, nearly all of them opted to adopt and adapt larger initiatives, such as the hashtag #LaCulturaEnTuCasa so as to include reference to a specific museum. This allowed an institution to differentiate itself from others, as we can see with the hashtags #AltamiraDesdeCasa from the Museo de Altamira or #elMNATenCasa from the Museo Nacional de Arqueología de Tarragona.
The numerical data reveal different levels of activity among the studied institutions, with that of the Alcazaba de Almería towering over the rest with the use of the hashtags #TuAlcazabaOnline and #AlcazabaOnline 461 times within a span of 100 days. In a distant second and third place are the hashtags used by the Museo de Arqueología de Alicante (MARQ) (#quedateencasaconelMARQ) and the Museo Arqueológico Nacional, which marked some of its initiatives with the hashtag #MANSiempreCerca. Finally, the Museu de la historia i la cultura de Mallorca stands out with its hashtag #MuseudeMallorcaDesdeCasa, which was used a similar number of times to the previous two examples.
Regarding V.1 (“purpose of message”), a purely transmissive goal predominates: 739 of the 1177 analyzed tweets (68.2%) provided factual information about a collection. This purpose of transmitting information in a unidirectional manner is closely linked to the absence of the r-elational factor (i.e., the interaction between different users or between users and the institution). Participative and interactive proposals made up 17.84% of the total number of tweets. Next, the analysis found initiatives whose purpose was to promote enjoyment and transference (11.72%). Finally, the research showed that the least common purposes were promoting understanding (6.63%) and fostering values of conservation, protection, and respect (6.68%).
Turning to the second variable (“r-elational factor”), a high percentage of tweets (82.3%) did not display the r-elational factor that leads to the interaction between various users or between users and an institution. In addition, 11.3% displayed a behaviorist mode of interaction, whereas a mere 4.25% sought to promote co-creation through creative or collaborative proposals. Finally, only 1.95% led users to reflect or interpret through the use of questions or critical engagement.
With respect to variable 3 (“predominant type of learning”), 53.44% of the tweets employ a cognitivist approach to learning, while 11.13% were based on a more behaviorist approach that relied on questions and answers. Finally, connectivist (5.69%) and constructivist (5.44%) approaches were the least frequent. The remaining 24.3% did not pursue any explicit learning outcome. Among the use of these hashtags, not all the tweets were meant to showcase a particular piece from a collection, propose a shared reflection, or launch a collaborative project. In fact, of the total collection of analyzed tweets, there were 891 (75.8%) instances in which the audience could be expected to acquire some sort of knowledge.
When it comes to learning, the study identified educational strategies based in pedagogical theories ranging from behaviorism to connectivism. Among these, we can observe that the 10 museums that regularly used a new hashtag or adapted hashtags that were invented during the lockdown (e.g., #QuedateenCasa) published more educative tweets than messages that were purely informative or promotional.
Among the institutions studied in this paper, several stand out for having found a way to truly take advantage of edu-communcative processes online during the lockdown, thus marking a real shift in their approach to cultural action on social media. In the case of the Alcazaba de Almería, it was already possible to detect the institution’s interest in edu-communication, due to their high level of activity. This priority was not interrupted during the lockdown, since they published at least four tweets a day. Furthermore, even before the pandemic and health crisis, this institution already offered a wide range of educational initiatives (e.g., #TrivialAlcazabeño, sharing images, etc.). This helps explain how this institution had the most outstanding figures among the sampled institutions in terms of the three variables measured by the research tool. The Museo Arqueológico de Alicante (MARQ) stands out for its ability to transform their edu-communicative activities and adapt to changing circumstances: they published videos and tweets with images with accompanying texts that explained a particular piece; furthermore, they even planned ceramic workshops or crafts activities that could be carried out at home and were inspired by a piece from their collection. The Museo Arqueológico Nacional (MAN) also increased their activity with the new hashtag #MANSiempreCerca. This activity included informative tweets, videos, and links to interactive activities hosted on the museum’s website. Beyond this, MAN stood out in their deployment of edu-communicative initiatives during the lockdown, with activities being launched with the hashtags #RetoMAN and #InterpretaMAN. The first consisted in a challenge built around answering questions and constitutes an interesting behaviorist approach (i.e., based on stimulus and response) and presented users with new information in the form of text, images, links, etc. The second hashtag corresponds to a creative participation initiative in which the public recreated works from the collection using household items, drawings, photomontages, etc. Among the works that users were asked to represent were the Dama de Elche (27.03), the Bicha de Balazote (03.04) and the statuette of the goddess Isis (17.04). As a response to all the submissions that the museum received, they published a video on 12 May paying tribute to and thanking users for all the contributions. This project marked a turning point in so far as it sought to create and strengthen the links between a cybercommunity and the museum through an online edu-communcative initiative.
Although it published a smaller number of tweets, one of the museums that showed the greatest degree of adaptability in their use of social media during the lockdown was the Museo Nacional de Arte Romano (MNAR). During its nine years of Twitter activity, this institution has published a total of 2711 tweets (2197 containing original material created by the institution). That said, during the lockdown through the use of the hashtags #EnCasaconelMNAR and/or #LaCulturaentuCasa, MNAR launched some notable participatory activities including the following: “cocina como un romano,” in which the museum provided recipes from Ancient Rome for users to try out at home and share online; the recreation of images using Playmobil; initiatives for the young users to depict the Olympic gods using templates posted online and common household items or short worksheets with 4–5 descriptive ideas. The Museo Nacional de Arqueología de Tarragona (MNAT) also rolled out similar activities that used craft projects to recreate pieces from the collection, cooking recipes, or proposals to share images online with other users (in this case, with the added bonus of giving away prizes from the museum as a way to boost participation). Other museums, such as the one from Altamira, opted not only to share content through video conferences, virtual visits, etc., but even shared at users’ leisure activities in the form of word searches. Especially interesting was an activity based on the game “I spy” using prehistoric objects, all of which led to posts with images, texts and explanatory videos. This final project reflects the growing tendency to share cultural content with the youngest users during the lockdown and to provide activities that could even be used by formal educational institutions as part of online learning.

3.4. Analysis of Content Related to the Sustainable Development Goals

This research includes a partial analysis of the presence and potential of social networks, in this case Twitter, in the scope and awareness of sustainable development goals, given that the Spanish museum institutions that have opted for networks as an edu-communicative channel of heritage are offering within their possibilities a sustainable path that seeks to promote one of the most significant sustainable development goals in our field of work, Goal 4 “Quality Education”, specifically promoting an inclusive, equitable, and quality education, promoting universal access learning opportunities [20] through participatory educational proposals that provide tools to work on museum content while posing creative challenges. This correspondence with the Sustainable Development Goals has been even more significant during the period of “state of alarm” experienced in the Spanish territory if we attend to the objectives proposed by the COVID-19 Global Education Coalition:
  • Help countries in mobilizing resources and implementing innovative and context-appropriate solutions to provide education remotely, leveraging hi-tech, low-tech, and no-tech approaches;
  • Seek equitable solutions and universal access.
  • Ensure coordinated responses and avoid overlapping efforts.
  • Facilitate the return of students to school when they reopen to avoid an upsurge in dropout rates.
Institutions are promoting distance education, saving cultural, social, and/or technological differences. Some, such as the Alcazaba de Almería, in the face of this situation, issued a tweet on a weekly basis, where they were accessible and motivating “we know that you are doing class work on our monuments, you can ask us what you want.” Actions like this give us a glimpse that some institutions are truly promoting an edu-communication policy in line with the Sustainable Development Goals and its adaptation to the situation imposed by COVID 19, despite the limitations set by the digital divide.
On the other hand, museum institutions through their edu-communicative strategies are indicating about Goal 11: “sustainable cities and communities: Make cities inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable” [21]. Specifically, this goal among its targets manifests the 11.4 “Strengthen efforts to protect and safeguard the world’s cultural and natural heritage” directly linked to our research object. Museum institutions that have published tweets with a clear objective of appropriation and care of heritage (V.1 D.4 within the proposed analysis tool) are working to achieve this target.
Based on the content analysis carried out on the tweets, a frequency table has been developed that starts from the results obtained in the study variables (see Table 6); in this way, we first synthesize those referring to the dominant learning type in the message. These indicators are discriminated through five indicators (3.1 “Behaviorism”, 3.2 “Cognitivism”, 3.3 “Constructivism”, 3.4 “Connectivism”, and 3.5 “There is not”); these are related to Goal 4. Secondly, those referred to indicator 1.4 “Promotes values of ownership, protection and respect” within the variable purpose of the message (heritage education), which is the one referred to Goal 11.
After more than five years on average on Twitter, the most active Spanish archaeological and “site” museums on this social network, or at least those that seem to show an edu-communicative policy planned in the medium and long term, seem to have assumed the Sustainable Development Goals referring to education, as they have offered activities mainly of an educational nature over merely informing or advertising. Of the 1177 tweets analyzed for this last part of the study, 74.9% offer, through different strategies, educational content: from mostly cognitive proposals where the institution offers educational content without waiting or seeking the interaction of Internet users to initiatives of constructivist character where it is sought to promote a social construction of knowledge.
On the other hand, in the Sustainable Development Goal referring to the sustainability of cities, the goal referring to the care and respect of heritage (Goal 11.4) has not yet been truly assumed at a considerable level in terms of daily or weekly activity, given that only 6.8% of the tweets analyzed have been issued with a clear objective of appropriation and respect for heritage.
Finally, and in relation to the content analysis from the perspective of the Sustainable Development Objectives involved with quality education, the promotion of culture and the sustainability of heritage, despite the fact that they are not explicitly expressed in the sample analyzed, there is an interesting number of tweets that show a high presence of the processes of valuation, conservation, and care of the heritage attributed to its sustainability, usually when an archaeological place has been damaged or is in danger. For example, Alcazaba de Almería tweeted 72 posts (15.62%) talking about heritage in danger, the importance of preservation work, etc. The rest of institutions, perhaps because they are indoor museums, barely tweeted about conservation or sustainability.

4. Discussion

On average, Spanish museums have been on social media for more than 5 years. Although the earliest profiles date to 2008, it was not until the period between 2012 and 2015 when one can really speak of a general presence on social media. The first years were characterized by the move from reliance on websites (a web 1.0 space) to social media (web 2.0 spaces) [13], which were seen as “spaces of convergence where the museum was the host but the public was able to feel as if they were at home” [49]. Nevertheless, there was a general sense of improvisation and a lack of a clear communicative program with concrete goals [27]. These beginnings are better described as communicative than as truly fostering dialogue [50]: museums with deeper pockets accumulated a greater number of followers and began short conversations with users or started to participate in debates that were not always begun by the museum itself [13], though some authors have maintained that the willingness to dialogue was not always open [50]. Yet this process of social opening slowly transitioned away from a rigid and informative mode of communication towards a significantly more open and inclusive sort of activity that encouraged participation and, importantly, has relied on a museum’s own identity to nurture a closer and more human type of relationship with users [49]. Several institutions have started to launch participatory projects that have attracted scholarly attention in Spain [26,51] and even further afield [52,53]. As we have already mentioned, all these processes are closely related to the sustainability of cultural heritage, therefore it is necessary to promote an education based on the objectives of sustainable development because they contribute to the comprehensive training of students and the development of skills. Key ideas contained in the 2030 agenda—”cultural awareness and expressions”, “digital competence”, and “social and civic”—underline the universal commitment to guarantee an inclusive, equitable, and quality education. Only by insisting and reinforcing its use in the educational context is it possible to achieve a cultural change based on sustainable development [54] and promote quality education based on social awareness and citizen commitment to heritage.
These events have undoubtedly sprung from the seeds of a cultural milieu on Twitter, which is clearly observable and, to a certain point, traceable through the use of different hashtags, such as #TwitterCultural (this provides a means of protecting things from the transitory nature of the platform). As a social media platform, Twitter makes it easy to find, talk about, and share whatever a user happens to be interested in and value. This has led to a fascinating dynamic whose evolution and the resulting processes of knowledge diffusion resemble, to a certain degree, the organization of an ant colony where an individual action (e.g., a like, retweet, or comment) forms part of the larger group identity located in cyberspace [55]. This shared identity can give rise to tightly knit heritage-based cybercommunities, when users come together due to an emotional connection to a piece of heritage [25,49,56]. Indeed, these communities can become extremely active when there is an activist mentality, as can be seen through the group “Huelva te Mira”, which was created in 2016 in response to the plundering of the archaeological site “La Orden-Seminario” (Huelva) and which boasts of more than 5000 followers on its official Facebook page. In this sense, we found on archaeological institutions’ social media two different contexts: on the one hand, museums and entities tasked with preservation, conservation as well as the study and sharing of heritage, and on the other hand, we can observe the museumization of sites where there is a perceived need to defend and demonstrate the value of local heritage by increasing heritage’s role in the process of identity formation; in the latter case, cybercommunities can emerge that are more participative [23] in line with the concept of cyber-citizenship [57].
The sudden arrival of COVID-19 has led to the physical closure of the museums. Yet in line with their own announcements, this closure has not only given way to increased activity on social media but has also allowed for the strategic organization of new ways to share an institution’s collection or even show off its nooks and crannies. This has generated an opportunity to increase user interaction through national and international initiatives such as #LaCulturaEnCasa or to dedicate more resources to activities related to the annual #MuseumWeek project. The shuttering of museum buildings, however, has also shed light on the differences between different museums’ use of social media and their capacity to move their activity into cyberspace. This study of Spanish archaeological and open-air museums demonstrates how informative modes of communication still predominate on Twitter when compared to edu-communication. That said, the importance of the latter has increased, representing 23% of used hashtags, compared to 74.2% of tweets in which already established generic hashtags are used to promote a museum’s daily activity. This number reflects the communicative continuity discussed by other authors [13,27,49,50] but also shows that the lockdown has marked a shift in communicative strategies on social media, starting with proposals collected together with new hashtags during the lockdown. This forms part of a global trend seen in all types of museums, from the USA to Italy: we see the rise of virtual visits and guided content [58], as well as other activities that are more interactive and playful. These new tendencies have been spearheaded largely by art museums, rather than archaeological ones [45,59,60]. Museums have embraced Twitter not merely as a means to share information and promotional material, but also as a space for beginning meaningfully educative types of communication that are more intense and sustained (e.g., the average number of tweets from Italian museums has jumped from one to two a day [59]) and go hand-in-hand with an increased use of other digital platforms [61].
Since the lockdown in response to COVID-19 in Spain coincided with the already planned #MuseumWeek, which is the most important event for museums across the world on Twitter, it is especially fruitful to study museums’ Twitter activity during #MuseumWeek 2020. This event began in 2014 at the initiative of French museums and was born from other previous projects, such as #Askacurator. The importance of the initiative was solidified when UNESCO got involved and it spread to other social media platforms. #MuseumWeek had already become the object of various studies that have sought to analyze the interactions, projects, and participation of museums in the said event through the use of messages published on social media [16,18,62]. These studies have presented similar findings that suggest that even if the lockdown did lead to a shift in the daily volume of messages online, #MuseumWeek in particular did not undergo such substantial changes. Although participation increased, that growth was constant with the continued rise of activity since #MuseumWeek began. In the context of this event, bidirectional communication between users and institutions or between different users remained rare or hardly relevant in terms of user responses, which had already been previously observed [63]. This suggests that education was a secondary objective for this initiative for which museum promotion and increasing visitor turnout were the primary goals. At any rate, this is the case for Spanish archaeological museums, even if the current social context is trending towards opening museums up to dialogue, actively involving the public, and listening to users’ requests [16].

5. Conclusions

Over the last several years museums have changed their use of social media: from just posting publicity or basic information (e.g., hours of operation, prices, special events, etc.) towards a search to build communication based on the museum’s own identity as an institution. In this regard, some museums have been leading the way for nearly a decade [49]. In other words, communication has evolved from the informative toward the participatory and inclusive [64], as can be seen in the present analysis of the most noteworthy examples of Spanish archaeological museums. Even though the present analysis has been limited to Twitter, it has been shown that there are indeed archaeological and open-air museums that have clearly opted for the model of the “social museum” or “museum 2.0” [65]. That said, it remains difficult to break with the predominant model of unidirectional communication that museums have used since they joined Twitter [13,14,64].
During the lockdown in response to COVID-19, Spanish archaeological museums have confirmed that they have received more traffic on their websites [42], as has been the case with other museums internationally. What is most meaningful, however, is how Spanish archaeological and open-air museums have intensified their activity in 2.0 spaces and, even more importantly, have diversified the type of content that they offer. This constitutes an attempt to open up new, edu-communicative paths, even if the final objective in most cases is still limited to encouraging online traffic on their official websites and, to a lesser degree, participating in virtual visits that are either guided or self-directed.
It is possible that the lockdown has accelerated a process already begun by museums as 2.0 edu-communicative initiatives. In this case changing conditions and reduced mobility would have sped up a change in the way that institutions communicate and interact with users, thus giving rise to more participative projects on social media. This marks a clear shift in museum’s conception of the web 2.0 and constitutes the first step towards building digital spaces for creation and encounters with users who feel that they are an active part of a museum and share the institutions objectives [24,66]; that is, the creation of heritage-based cybercommunities organized around a museum. Furthermore, this new educational space offers different ways of actively participating that ought to be explored and exploited to further learning [67]. In Spain, several apps have recently been launched such as RomanSites (http://civitas.unizar.es) or the Aragón open air museum [68] that are spearheading new ways of collaboratively cataloguing archaeological heritage and creating citizen science projects linked to heritage education. A participatory, collaborative, citizen science initiative that contributes to sustainability through non-invasive open-air musealization for the transmission and conservation of heritage.
In spite of the fact that the Sustainable Development Goals are not explicitly stated in the sample analyzed, there is a high presence of the processes of valorization, conservation, and care of heritage attributed to its sustainability (tweets highlight the importance of heritage, its processes of conservation, restoration, recovery of assets, transfers). Definitely, Sustainable Development Goals contribute to the comprehensive training of students and the development of the key competencies included in the 2030 agenda, underlining the universal commitment to guarantee an inclusive, equitable, and quality education [22,69]. However, we are aware of the limitations that social networks have in a significant part of the population, therefore they can facilitate access and reduce inequalities, but not in a totalitarian way as would be desirable, since it cannot overcome the existing digital divide. Although access to the Internet is not free or freely accessible at a universal level, it is access to the social network Twitter and/or opening a profile on this network. Therefore, any content or strategy with a marked educational character works to achieve a true education accessible to all the population to which they can have access. In some way, when the museum applies an edu-communicative strategy in its discourse, it is trying to overcome obstacles such as the economic one with the acquisition of tickets, or the accessibility to its space, avoiding travel to the physical place and bringing culture closer together, in addition to facilitating resources permanently available to the user.
To be aware, in figures of the social reach of these spaces, we refer to some data taken from The Social Media Family 2020, “Currently, 3.8 billion Internet users worldwide (of the 4.5 billion registered) interact on a social platform. To contextualize this data, use this comparison: 48% of the 7750 million inhabitants of the planet have a social profile” [70]. According to the latest Survey of Cultural Habits and Practices 2018–2019 prepared by the Ministry of Culture and Sports of Spain in September 2019 [71], in Spain there are 30,353,000 Internet users (76.9% of the population). Within these figures, 2,083,000 Internet users (5.3% of the total population: Internet users and non-Internet users) make virtual visits to museums, exhibitions, and monuments; 4,942,000 (12.5%) seek information on museums, exhibitions, and monuments.
We can even specify more: 2,408,000 Internet users (6.1% of the total population) “interact virtually through forums, messages, likes, social networks on issues related to culture” [71]. Within these figures, there is a very significant idea: the interaction linked to museums, libraries, and monuments in forums and social networks is barely 0.8% of the total population or 1.1% within Internet users. Even if we specify even more and only filter by “social networks”, there are barely 280,000 Internet users (0.7% of the total population, 0.9% of the Internet population) who interact on social networks from museums, libraries, and monuments. All these data prepared by the Government of Spain on cultural habits and practices show us the long way to go. Cultural networks and edu-communicative policy are exploring their interaction channels, causing important changes in relation to social reach, new opportunities, and educational models [72], which will undoubtedly be promoted with the current situation, immersed in a digital change. There is still a long way to go before we can talk about a cybercultural activity where institutions and heritage are the axis and motor of educational, transformative, and integrative dynamics, but this sustainability requires a paradigm shift in education from interactive and participatory environments [73]. Only through proper training in the field of formal education and the promotion and proliferation of truly participatory and inclusive initiatives, always from the free access and participation that the social network allows “knowledge as a shared resource” [74], will we be able to achieve the goals.
Finally, it is worth underscoring that this study has collected meaningful proposals and demonstrated that COVID-19 has been in some instances a sort of catalyst for the action taken by Spanish archaeological and open-air museums on social media. These institutions not only have increased their activity but have also published content with greater educational value. However, many institutions are still stuck in a model of unidirectional knowledge transmission, which is light years away from projects that are meaningfully rooted in constructivist and connectivist understandings of learning. This means that museums still need to move away from proposals that do not give rise to true edu-communicative initiatives: for all the exciting new proposals that we have seen, we cannot forget that only 12.2% of the 254 Spanish archaeological and open-air museums studied in this paper developed a edu-communicative 2.0 project on Twitter.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, I.N.-N., P.R. and S.G.-C.; methodology, I.N.-N., S.G.-C., and B.A.; software, I.N.-N.; validation, P.R. and S.G.-C.; formal analysis, I.N.-N. and B.A.; investigation, I.N.-N. and B.A.; data curation, I.N.-N. and B.A.; writing—original draft preparation, I.N.-N. and S.G.-C.; writing—review and editing, P.R. and B.A.; visualization, S.G.-C.; supervision, P.R.; project administration, P.R.; funding acquisition, P.R. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by Government of Aragón and European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), grant number RISS3-LMP18_18 “ARAGÓN OPEN AIR MUSEUM (2014-2020 Construyendo Europa desde Aragón)”. Besides, this research was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities and EU’s ERDF grant number EDU2016-78163-R “Educomunicación web 2.0 del patrimonio”. Finally, this research was funded by Government of Aragón and the University institute for Research in Environmental Sciences of Aragon (IUCA) and Research Group ARGOS, grant number (S50_20R). The funders of this research have had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.

Acknowledgments

This article has been possible thanks to the project RISS3-LMP18_18 MUSEO AL LIBRE DE ARAGÓN (Government of Aragon and ERDF 2014-2020 “Building Europe from Aragon”), to the research project EDU2016-78163-R “Web 2.0 educommunication of heritage” (Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities of Spain and ERDF), and the research group ARGOS, the didactics of social sciences, that has the support of the Government of Aragon, FEDER (EU) 2014-2020 and the University Institute of Research in Environmental Sciences of Aragon (IUCA) of the University of Zaragoza.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Table 1. Analytical tool for heritage edu-communication on the web 2.0.
Table 1. Analytical tool for heritage edu-communication on the web 2.0.
VARIABLESINDICATORSDESCRIPTORS
1. Purpose of the message (Heritage Education)1.1 Purely transmissive, to make information knownThe main objective is to inform and bring a museum’s collection closer to the public by contextualizing the works or any other academic data related to a work.
1.2 Participatory and interactive proposalsThe main objective of the post is to spur the participation/involvement of Internet users
1.3 Give tools for understandingThe post mainly provides content of a reflective nature.
1.4 Promotes values of stewardship, protection, and respectTries to involve the public so that heritage can come to be understood as an active part of society.
1.5 Enjoy and transferInvolves users to integrate them into the museum’s activities, projects, contests, webquests, etc., enjoying the process.
2. R-elational Factor 2.1 Interaction (demonstrative)Type of interaction: behavioral, question–answer (quizzes, trivia, password, etc.).
2.2 Reflection (interpretative)Through questions, fosters a critical dimension, helps to interpret.
2.3 Co-creation (constructive)Transformative, creative, collaborative.
2.4 Non-applicableDoes not seek participation.
3. Dominant learning type3.1 BehaviorismThere is a question asked by the institution that awaits the public’s answer; there is a question-and-answer dynamic (password).
3.2 CognitivismThe tweet itself indicates where the answer is
3.3 ConstructivismDirectly challenges users; appeals to socialization and the exchange of personal experiences and mixes previous knowledge with the current context.
3.4 ConnectivismIt joins the initiative of another institution at the same time that it connects a current issue with an educational element of its collection; cites another institution, uses a specific appearance hashtag (a daily topic, nothing scheduled, or periodic).
3.5 Non-applicableIt is an advertisement or reply to another account
Table 2. The Twitter activity of archeological and open-air museums. The table summarizes the number of followers, activity, and most-used hashtags.
Table 2. The Twitter activity of archeological and open-air museums. The table summarizes the number of followers, activity, and most-used hashtags.
MuseumFollowersActivity DatesTotal ActivityOriginal
Tweets
Most Used Hashtag /Function
Conjunto Monumental Alcazaba de Almería8640January-2020 to July-202030,6942375#AlcazabaOnline 461Tweets/Educativo
ARQVA. Museo Nacional Arqueología Subacuática1510May-2018 to July-2020481391#Museo
31 Tweets/Informativo
Conjunto Arqueológico Baelo Claudia2399January-2015 to July-20201349554#BaeloClaudia
58 Twees /Informativo
Conjunto Arqueológico Sitio de los dólmenes de Antequera1796Dicember-2015 to July-202040711451#SitiosdelosDólmenesdeAntquera
388 Tweets/Informativo
Museu de Guissona (Camps i Cava)2858March-2015 to July-202043432431#Guissona
268 Tweets/Informativo
Libisosa Yacimiento arqueológico835May-2018 to July-2020320232#Libisosa
74 Tweets/Educativo
MARQ. Museo Arqueológico de Alicante18,116March-2019 to July-202018,2612845#MARQ
817 Tweets/Informativo
Medina Azahara. Conjunto Arqueológico2238February-2016 to July-20203042696#EnCasaConMedina
45 Tweets/Educativo
Museo Alhambra18,602March-2018 to July-202014,9392291#MuseumWeek
87 Tweets/Educativo
MAC. Museu d´Arqueología de Catalunya16,099May-2018 to July-202016,7422801#MACbcn
256 Tweets/Informativo
Museo Arqueológico de Córdoba4960August-2018 to July-20206964780#Prensa
84 Tweets/Informativo
Museo Arqueológico de Vizcaya1321February-2013 to July-202022691574#IceAgeEuropeNow
28 Tweets/Informativo
Museo Arqueológico de Granada2542October-2018 to July-202069681685#TesorosDelMusarqGranada
209 Tweets/Educativo
MAEF Museu. Museu Arqueol‘gic d’Eivissa i Formentera498January-2013 to July-2020561526#viu_el_MAEF
45 Tweets/Informativo
MAN. Museo Arqueológico Nacional52,726Dicember-2017 to July-202016,0293390#MANSiempreCerca
154 Tweets/Educativo
MUPREVA. Museo Prehistoria Valencia4508June-2016 to July-202053023147#Mupreva
253 Tweets/Informativo
Museo Canario3509September-2014
to July-2020
18271111#elmuseocanario
263 Tweets/Informativo
Museo de Altamira14,571January-2018 to July-20209317916#cuevadeAltamira
88 Tweets/Informativo
Museo de la Evolución Humana36,192October-2017 to July-202016,2091866#Burgos
141 Tweets/Informativo
Museo Íbero de Jaén3151November-2017 to July-20201631997#MuseoIbero
106 Tweets/Informativo
MNAT. Museu Nacional Arqueològic de Tarragona4083October-2012 to July-202025821437#joproposo
99 Tweets/Informativo
MNAR. Museo Nacional de Arte Romano19,153March-2011 to July-202027112197#LaCulturaEnTuCasa
53 Tweets/Educativo
Museu de Badaona4525October-2011 to July-202031162131#Badalona
394 Tweets/Informativo
Museu de la Noguera1010March-2013 to July-202019161279#Balaguer
140 Tweets/Informativo
Museu de Villena. Museo Arqueológico José María Soler1195August-2011 to July-20201224971#Villena
298 Tweets/Informativo
Museu de la història i de la cultura de Mallorca. (Pollentia)5332June-2014 to July-202043622393#MuseudeMallorcaDesdecasa
138 Tweets/Educativo
Museus de les Terres de l’Ebre i de la Mar de l’Ebre4715September-2019
to July-2020
53501921#terresdelebre
173 Tweets/Informativo
Oiasso. Museo Arqueológico Irún2325August-2015 to July-202046351904#Oiasso
238 Tweets/Informativo
Patronato Alhambra y Generalife64,520June-2018 to July-201721,8022276#Alhambra
151 Tweets/Informativo
Vilamuseu. Red de Monumentos y Museos de Villajoyosa1904February-2012 to July-202027672112#Villajoyosa
540 Tweets/Informativo
Villa Romana La Olmeda1315April-2017 to July-202017871728#LaOlmeda
786 Tweets/Informativo
Table 3. Topics for MuseumWeek 2020.
Table 3. Topics for MuseumWeek 2020.
DayHashtagDefinitionMain Objective
1#HéroesMWPays tribute to workers in essential functionsAcknowledge
2#CulturaEnCuarentenaMWInvites users to recreate works of art from homeParticipatory
3#JuntosMWPays tribute to the larger community and collective effort.Acknowledge/Reflective
4#MomentosMuseoMWInvites users to share memories from past visits.Participatory
5#climaMWTries to raise awareness about the climate crisisReflective
6#TecnologíaMWShows how the institution uses technology to stay connectedInformative/Promotional
7#SueñosMWInvites users to dream of a better worldReflective/Participatory
Table 4. The participation of Spanish archaeological and open-air museums in MuseumWeek between 2018 and 2020.
Table 4. The participation of Spanish archaeological and open-air museums in MuseumWeek between 2018 and 2020.
#MuseumWeek
Museum201820192020
Conjunto Monumental Alcazaba de AlmeríaUnrecoverable dataUnrecoverable data20 Tweets
ARQVA. Museo Nacional Arqueología SubacuáticaThere is no data10 Tweets6 Tweets
Conjunto Arqueológico Baelo Claudia16 Tweets The museum did not participate13 Tweets
Conjunto Arqueológico Sitio de los dólmenes de AntequeraThere is no data3 Tweets8 Tweets
Museu de Guissona (Camps i Cava)45 Tweets17 Tweets22 Tweets
Libisosa Yacimiento arqueológicoThe museum did not participate1 Tweet2 Tweets
MARQ. Museo Arqueológico de AlicanteUnrecoverable data8 Tweets18 Tweets
Medina Azahara. Conjunto ArqueológicoThere is no data5 Tweets8 Tweets
Museo Alhambra49 Tweets22 Tweets16 Tweets
MAC. Museu d ´Arqueología de CatalunyaUnrecoverable data3 Tweets11 Tweets
Museo Arqueológico de VizcayaUnrecoverable data15 Tweets (7 basque + 7 spanish + 1 english)14 Tweets (7 basque + 7 spanish)
Museo Arqueológico de GranadaUnrecoverable data2 Tweets (The museum did not participate)20 Tweets
MAEF Museu. Museu Arqueològic d’Eivissa i FormenteraThe museum did not participateThe museum did not participate9 Tweets
MAN. Museo Arqueológico Nacional10 Tweets7 Tweets13 Tweets
MUPREVA. Museo Prehistoria ValenciaUnrecoverable dataUnrecoverable data29 Tweets
Museo Canario62 Tweets16 Tweets16 Tweets
Museo de Altamira4 Tweets7 Tweets21 Tweets
Museo de la Evolución HumanaUnrecoverable dataUnrecoverable data16 Tweets
Museo Íbero de Jaén8 Tweets14 Tweets9 Tweets
MNAT. Museu Nacional Arqueològic de TarragonaUnrecoverable data9 Tweets21 Tweets
MNAR. Museo Nacional de Arte RomanoUnrecoverable data8 Tweets32 Tweets
Museu de BadalonaThe museum did not participateThe museum did not participate10 Tweets
Museu de la Noguera10 Tweets (2 duplicates)10 Tweets8 Tweets
Museu de la història i de la cultura de Mallorca. (Pollentia)49 Tweets31 Tweets (2 tweets Mallorquí and 1 Tweet english)31 Tweets
Oiasso. Museo Arqueológico Irún12 Tweets21 Tweets7 Tweets
Vilamuseu. Red de Monumentos y Museos de Villajoyosa10 Tweets13 tweets11 Tweets
Villa Romana La Olmeda9 TweetsThe museum did not participate11 Tweets
Table 5. Analysis and catalogue of educational hashtags used during the lockdown.
Table 5. Analysis and catalogue of educational hashtags used during the lockdown.
MuseumHastags Covid 19TweetsV.1 Purpose of the MessageV.2 R-elational FactorV.3 Dominant Learning Type
1.11.21.31.41.52.12.22.32.43.13.23.33.43.5
Conjunto Monumental Alcazaba de Almería#TuAlcazabaOnLine #AlcazabaOnline461191153272431092218312104157484148
MARQ. Museo Arqueológico de Alicante#quedateencasaconelMARQ181105201730001810942184
Medina Azahara. Conjunto Arqueológico#EnCasaConMedina45320130000045045000
Museo Alhambra#TuMuseoOnLine36160190100036133002
Museo Arqueológico Córdoba#QuedateEnCasa6053060100060058002
Museo de Altamira#AltamiraDesdeCasa30121232160618712407
MAN. Museo Arqueológico Nacional#MANSiempreCerca1541161910271711135159122125
MNAR. Museo Nacional de Arte Romano#EnCasaconelMNAR #LaCulturaEnTuCasa533312215001439037439
MNAT. Museu Nacional Arqueològic de Tarragona#elMNATaCasa193120131011744416
Museu de la història i de la cultura de Mallorca. (Pollentia)#MuseudeMallorcaDesdecasa138110023140001380980373
1177671210788013813323509711316296467286
%5717.846.636.811.7211.31.954.2582.511.1353.445.445.6924.3
Table 6. Analysis of content related to the Sustainable Development Goals.
Table 6. Analysis of content related to the Sustainable Development Goals.
Nº MuseumHashtags Covid 19TweetsSGDs.4 EducationSGDs.11 Cities (Heritage)
3.1 Behav.3.2 Cogn.3.3 Constr.3.4 Connect.3.5 There is notV1/D 1.4 owner.and resp.
10121177131629646728680
%11.1353.445.445.6924.36.8
Note. SGDs: Sustainable Development Goals.

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Rivero, P.; Navarro-Neri, I.; García-Ceballos, S.; Aso, B. Spanish Archaeological Museums during COVID-19 (2020): An Edu-Communicative Analysis of Their Activity on Twitter through the Sustainable Development Goals. Sustainability 2020, 12, 8224. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12198224

AMA Style

Rivero P, Navarro-Neri I, García-Ceballos S, Aso B. Spanish Archaeological Museums during COVID-19 (2020): An Edu-Communicative Analysis of Their Activity on Twitter through the Sustainable Development Goals. Sustainability. 2020; 12(19):8224. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12198224

Chicago/Turabian Style

Rivero, Pilar, Iñaki Navarro-Neri, Silvia García-Ceballos, and Borja Aso. 2020. "Spanish Archaeological Museums during COVID-19 (2020): An Edu-Communicative Analysis of Their Activity on Twitter through the Sustainable Development Goals" Sustainability 12, no. 19: 8224. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12198224

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