The Exploratorium requests $1,389,665 to develop "Live @ the Exploratorium: Origins." The Exploratorium will conduct a three-year pilot project to develop an experimental series of Webcasts, related Web-based resources, and museum activities . The project will use new communications technologies to create an ongoing link between Internet and museum audiences and current scientific research efforts at observatories around the world where scientists are investigating the origins of matter, the universe, the Earth, and life itself. The Exploratorium will establish a remote connection to six science research locations investigating particle physics, cosmology, polar research, earthquake research, astrobiology and genetics. During each live Webcast museum visitors and Internet visitors will be able to interact with scientists at the remote observatories.
This seminar on technical communication and presentations was prepared and given by Tim Miller of SpokenScience.com. This seminar provides the fundamentals in sharing science as Miller explains how to choose the very best tools to do the job of communication and shares some of the tips and tricks that can help you take your scientific presentations to the next level. Miller led this particular version at Duke University in the summer of 2010.
In this article, Tisha Carper Long, a student in museum studies, explores how the bleak job market is affecting recent graduates of museum studies programs. Carper Long outlines ways unemployed professionals and new graduates can "get by" until the economic outlook improves.
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TEAM MEMBERS:
Tisha Carper LongNational Association for Museum Exhibition
In this article, Mary Jane Taylor, Interim Director of Public Programs at Winterthur Museum & Country Estate, shares the Request for Proposal process associated with the "Made in China: Export Porcelain from the Leo and Doris Hodroff Collection at Winterthur" exhibition and the associated "Design your own plate" interactive. Evaluation results and RFP are included in this article.
In this article, R. Lee Carson, Contract Negotiator and Attorney with the Smithsonian Institution Office of Contracting, describes the key elements of the Smithsonian's procurement policy and general rules followed in the solicitation process. Carson also provides some common pit-falls and suggestions for improvements for improvements in proposals for exhibit design and exhibit fabrication.
In this article, Barbara A. Becker, independent exhibit developer and museum consultant and Kris Nesbitt, exhibit developer, share the benefits of traveling to the Amazon region to develop the "Amazon Rising: Seasons of the River" at Chicago's Shedd Aquarium. The authors describe the trips the teams made to research and collect artifacts and analyze how travel greatly strengthened the exhibit development process, the effectiveness of the exhibit, and the power of their message.
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TEAM MEMBERS:
Barbara A. BeckerKris NesbittNational Association for Museum Exhibition
In this article, Lois H. Silverman, professor in the Department of Recreation and Park Administration at Indiana University, examines how meaning making, a powerful theoretical concept, can apply to museums. Silverman analyzes literature on the subject as well as provides ten points related to how this meaning-making perspective can be put into actual exhibit design practice.
In this article, George E. Hein, Professor Emeritus and Senior Research Associate, Program Evaluation and Research Group, Lesley College, discusses meaning making and constructivism, two often confused terms and how they relate to exhibit development. Hein reviews educational theories to point out that constructivist educational theory elevates meaning making to a central role in learning.
In this article, Paul Katz, Ph.D., Curator of the Texas Pharmacy Museum and partner in the PRIAM consulting firm, discusses the development of the "Playas...Gems of the Plains" traveling exhibit, produced by the Panhandle Museum Resource Sharing Consortium and later the Northwest Texas Museum Association. Katz describes the rationale behind the exhibit, its components, its uniqueness as a traveling exhibit, and evaluation findings.
This article presents three museums with new approaches to sharing information about dinosaurs. The authors include Nancy Lynn, Director of Traveling Programs at the American Museum of Natural History, Jennifer Pace Robinson, Director of Exhibit Development at The Children's Museum of Indianapolis, Jeffrey H. Patchen, President and CEO, The Children's Museum of Indianapolis, and Todd J. Tubutis, Senior Project Manager of Exhibits at The Field Museum in Chicago.
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TEAM MEMBERS:
Nancy LynnJennifer Pace RobinsonJeffrey H. PatchenTodd J. Tubutis
This article highlights some of the diverse ways that different types of museums use place-based education to further their missions and benefit their audiences. Authors include Janet Petitpas, Assistant Director of the Bay Area Discovery Museum, Maggie Russell-Ciardi, Education Coordinator for the Lower East Side Tenement Museum, Lori Salles, Exhibit Manager at the Turtle Bay Exploration Park, and Mary Jo Sutton, Director of Exhibitions at the Bay Area Discovery Museum.
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Janet PetitpasMaggie Russell-CiardiLori SallesMary Jo Sutton
In this article, George E. Hein, Professor Emeritus at Lesley University, discusses "meaning making" and what the concept implies for exhibit developers. Hein discusses theory and research to investigate the role of meaning making within museums.