-
Webinar: Sustainable Preservation: Quick Tips and Approaches for Museums, Libraries, and Archives
Three cultural heritage professionals that represent a cross section of the field are joining the Image Permanence Institute to present quick tips and actionable approaches to environmentally sustainable preservation practices. As Principle and Cultural Sector Lead for Sustainable Museums, Sarah Sutton is an expert in how cultural heritage institutions can help address climate change. Angela Moore, Sustainability Coordinator for the Missouri History Museum, has expertise in sustainable facilities operations. Lab Manager for the UCLA/Getty Program in Conservation of Archaeological and Ethnographic Materials, William Shelley, incorporates sustainable approaches in conservation practices. Join us in honor of Earth Month as we highlight environmental stewardship and build awareness of sustaina...
published: 12 May 2021
-
Economics of Open Content: Archives, Museums, and Libraries
Clifford Lynch, Executive Director of the Coalition for Networked Information, reviews the progress made on day one of the conference, highlighting how academic and commercial thinking and markets overlap. The panel on archives, museums, and libraries opens with David Dawson, Head of Digital Futures of the UK Museums, Libraries, and Archives Council, outlining UK research and funding agendas and business modeling, including models for new relationships with public broadcasting. Kati Geber, Manager of Research and Business Intelligence at the Canadian Heritage Information Network, follows with an analysis of the scene in Canada, noting that 75 percent of museum visitors in Canada today begin their visits online.
If Only We Knew Yesterday What We Know Today
Clifford Lynch, Coalition for ...
published: 17 Apr 2014
-
Museums, Libraries, and 21st Century Skills -- Archived Webinar
On September 29, 2010, IMLS held a webinar to introduce museum professionals to its Museums, Libraries, and 21st Century Skills report and the accompanying self assessment tool.
Speakers included:
Mary Chute, IMLS Deputy Director for Libraries
Mary Boone, North Carolina State Librarian
Jeffrey Patchen, President and CEO of the Indianapolis Children’s Museum
Luis Herrera, San Francisco City Librarian
Webinar participants received:
Guidance for how to use the IMLS Museums, Libraries and 21st Century Skills Report and Self-Assessment Tool
Best practices and approaches to enhancing 21st century skills of audiences and stakeholders
Details for specific grant opportunities
Visit http://www.imls.gov/about/21st_century_skills_institution.aspx for more information ...
published: 05 Aug 2014
-
2019 Summit on the Value of Galleries, libraries, Archives and Museums
Interpretation Disclaimer
“The interpretation between English and French is not intended to be used as a verbatim record or translation by any party as the interpreted version is a live interpretation; the accuracy of the content cannot be assured. If an accurate record of the content is needed, a written translation from the original language should be undertaken, relying on the transcript of the original floor recording.”
published: 13 May 2019
-
Scaling Training for Tribal Archives, Libraries, and Museums + Public Libraries
Staff working in tribal archives, libraries, and museums (TALMs) have a pressing need for training to support digital stewardship of the unique cultural heritage materials in their care. Panelists will discuss online courses about digital stewardship developed specifically for TALMs and small public libraries, which center community values and needs.
Speakers: Mercy Procaccini (OCLC), Lotus Norton-Wisla (Digital & Community Outreach Archivist, Washington State University Center for Digital Scholarship and Curation), Selena Ortega-Chiolero (Museum Specialist, Chickaloon Village Traditional Council), Monique Tyndall (Director of Cultural Affairs, Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohicans)
* Download Presentation Slides: https://clir-dlf.box.com/s/8cyjyapahajr9sq932pg1m8kgxwi2ubf
* Download Prese...
published: 12 Jan 2022
-
Economics of Open Content: Archives, Museums, and Libraries (Part 2)
The archives, museums, and libraries panel continues with Howard Besser, Director of Moving Image Archiving and Preservation and Professor of Cinema Studies at New York University, describing work underway in moving-image and recorded-sound cataloging and preservation, and Ellen Dunlap, president of the American Antiquarian Society, describing the commercial relationships that this library has fostered for the past 50 years and how commerce and open content can work together. Sumir Meghani, Business Development Manager for Yahoo! Search, discusses commercial perspectives generally and Yahoo's stakes in particular in furthering open content by analyzing the new Open Content Alliance that Yahoo! has helped to launch.
Industry Study: The Economics of Open Archives, Museums, and Libraries
Ho...
published: 17 Apr 2014
-
Partnering for Public Impact: Archives, Libraries & Museums
This webinar was presented on October 30, 2014 as part of the CoSA Member Webinar Series.
published: 13 Apr 2016
-
Careers in Arts, History, Humanities, Museums, and Libraries
The Arts, History, Humanities & Culture Cluster of the White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity through Historically Black Colleges and Universities presented a webinar,
Exploring Career and Professional Development Opportunities in the Arts, Humanities, Museums, Libraries, and History Sectors on
Tuesday, February 1, 2022.
Participants learned about career/job opportunities in the arts, humanities, history, museum, and library space as well as the ways the federal government supports professional development for HBCU faculty and leadership working in these areas. Despite economic hardships faced by the sector during COVID-19, creative and cultural occupations and industries have a history of growth and resilience. During the session, p...
published: 21 Mar 2022
-
Museums and Archives Programming for a new normal
Presented by Mairead O'Rourke, CultureRunner
This video is a recording of our training session about museum and archives programming in "the new normal". It looks at the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and how museums and archives have responded to it. It discusses the challenges and opportunities presented by the pandemic, and what are they key considerations when trying to plan for an uncertain future. It also includes a case study from Hastings Museum.
Timestamps:
0:00 Introduction
1:10 Why are we here?
4:10 Case study - Hastings Museum
33:46 Culture and leisure services under lockdown
35:32 Impact of Covid-19
37:31 How can museums and archives respond to the issues created by Covid-19?
43:05 Examples of virtual offers
45:42 Challenges and opportunities
published: 02 Nov 2021
-
Historypin: Libraries, Archives & Museums Sharing Content
Nick Stanhope, CEO of We Are What We Do, the non-profit organization behind Historypin, the citizen historian platform created with Google as a way for people to come together, from across different generations and cultures, to create and explore the history of their communities
Historypin (http://www.historypin.com/) is a way for millions of people
(and libraries, archives, and museums) to come together, from across
different generations, cultures, and places, to share small glimpses of
the past and to build up the huge story of human history. Historypin
is made up of photographic images, videos, audio clips, and descriptive
and narrative text that have been pinned directly to the Historypin map by users.
published: 26 Jun 2012
1:01:11
Webinar: Sustainable Preservation: Quick Tips and Approaches for Museums, Libraries, and Archives
Three cultural heritage professionals that represent a cross section of the field are joining the Image Permanence Institute to present quick tips and actionabl...
Three cultural heritage professionals that represent a cross section of the field are joining the Image Permanence Institute to present quick tips and actionable approaches to environmentally sustainable preservation practices. As Principle and Cultural Sector Lead for Sustainable Museums, Sarah Sutton is an expert in how cultural heritage institutions can help address climate change. Angela Moore, Sustainability Coordinator for the Missouri History Museum, has expertise in sustainable facilities operations. Lab Manager for the UCLA/Getty Program in Conservation of Archaeological and Ethnographic Materials, William Shelley, incorporates sustainable approaches in conservation practices. Join us in honor of Earth Month as we highlight environmental stewardship and build awareness of sustainability efforts within the field.
https://wn.com/Webinar_Sustainable_Preservation_Quick_Tips_And_Approaches_For_Museums,_Libraries,_And_Archives
Three cultural heritage professionals that represent a cross section of the field are joining the Image Permanence Institute to present quick tips and actionable approaches to environmentally sustainable preservation practices. As Principle and Cultural Sector Lead for Sustainable Museums, Sarah Sutton is an expert in how cultural heritage institutions can help address climate change. Angela Moore, Sustainability Coordinator for the Missouri History Museum, has expertise in sustainable facilities operations. Lab Manager for the UCLA/Getty Program in Conservation of Archaeological and Ethnographic Materials, William Shelley, incorporates sustainable approaches in conservation practices. Join us in honor of Earth Month as we highlight environmental stewardship and build awareness of sustainability efforts within the field.
- published: 12 May 2021
- views: 906
54:24
Economics of Open Content: Archives, Museums, and Libraries
Clifford Lynch, Executive Director of the Coalition for Networked Information, reviews the progress made on day one of the conference, highlighting how academic...
Clifford Lynch, Executive Director of the Coalition for Networked Information, reviews the progress made on day one of the conference, highlighting how academic and commercial thinking and markets overlap. The panel on archives, museums, and libraries opens with David Dawson, Head of Digital Futures of the UK Museums, Libraries, and Archives Council, outlining UK research and funding agendas and business modeling, including models for new relationships with public broadcasting. Kati Geber, Manager of Research and Business Intelligence at the Canadian Heritage Information Network, follows with an analysis of the scene in Canada, noting that 75 percent of museum visitors in Canada today begin their visits online.
If Only We Knew Yesterday What We Know Today
Clifford Lynch, Coalition for Networked Information
Industry Study: The Economics of Open Archives, Museums, and Libraries
David Dawson, Museums, Libraries, and Archives Council, UK
Kati Geber, Canadian Heritage Information Network
On January 23-24, 2006, Intelligent Television hosts the Economics of Open Content symposium at MIT to bring together representatives from media industries, cultural and educational institutions, and legal and business minds to discuss how to make open content happen better and faster.
With the support of the Hewlett Foundation and MIT Open Courseware, Intelligent Television brings representatives of commercial media industries (publishing, film, music, television, video, software, education/courseware, gaming) together with representatives of cultural and educational institutions who are innovative in this area and legal and business minds in the academy who are studying how to make this happen faster and better. New Yorker economics columnist and bestselling author (The Wisdom of Crowds) James Surowiecki keynotes at the Cambridge meeting, with a presentation entitled 'Openness as an Ethos.'
Intelligent Television has been conducting a year-long investigation into the economics of open content. This project is a systematic study of why and how it makes sense for commercial companies and noncommercial institutions active in culture, education, and media to make certain materials widely available for free, and also how free services are finding new (sometimes commercial) ways of becoming sustainable. The project builds upon written work that Intelligent Television recently completed with the support of the Mellon Foundation and Ithaka on Marketing Culture in the Digital Age, and also upon work now being completed as part of the Mellon Foundation-supported Commission on Cyberinfrastructure in the Humanities and Social Sciences. The project also informs new economic models that Intelligent Television is establishing for its documentary work.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
https://wn.com/Economics_Of_Open_Content_Archives,_Museums,_And_Libraries
Clifford Lynch, Executive Director of the Coalition for Networked Information, reviews the progress made on day one of the conference, highlighting how academic and commercial thinking and markets overlap. The panel on archives, museums, and libraries opens with David Dawson, Head of Digital Futures of the UK Museums, Libraries, and Archives Council, outlining UK research and funding agendas and business modeling, including models for new relationships with public broadcasting. Kati Geber, Manager of Research and Business Intelligence at the Canadian Heritage Information Network, follows with an analysis of the scene in Canada, noting that 75 percent of museum visitors in Canada today begin their visits online.
If Only We Knew Yesterday What We Know Today
Clifford Lynch, Coalition for Networked Information
Industry Study: The Economics of Open Archives, Museums, and Libraries
David Dawson, Museums, Libraries, and Archives Council, UK
Kati Geber, Canadian Heritage Information Network
On January 23-24, 2006, Intelligent Television hosts the Economics of Open Content symposium at MIT to bring together representatives from media industries, cultural and educational institutions, and legal and business minds to discuss how to make open content happen better and faster.
With the support of the Hewlett Foundation and MIT Open Courseware, Intelligent Television brings representatives of commercial media industries (publishing, film, music, television, video, software, education/courseware, gaming) together with representatives of cultural and educational institutions who are innovative in this area and legal and business minds in the academy who are studying how to make this happen faster and better. New Yorker economics columnist and bestselling author (The Wisdom of Crowds) James Surowiecki keynotes at the Cambridge meeting, with a presentation entitled 'Openness as an Ethos.'
Intelligent Television has been conducting a year-long investigation into the economics of open content. This project is a systematic study of why and how it makes sense for commercial companies and noncommercial institutions active in culture, education, and media to make certain materials widely available for free, and also how free services are finding new (sometimes commercial) ways of becoming sustainable. The project builds upon written work that Intelligent Television recently completed with the support of the Mellon Foundation and Ithaka on Marketing Culture in the Digital Age, and also upon work now being completed as part of the Mellon Foundation-supported Commission on Cyberinfrastructure in the Humanities and Social Sciences. The project also informs new economic models that Intelligent Television is establishing for its documentary work.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
- published: 17 Apr 2014
- views: 86
1:03:26
Museums, Libraries, and 21st Century Skills -- Archived Webinar
On September 29, 2010, IMLS held a webinar to introduce museum professionals to its Museums, Libraries, and 21st Century Skills report and the accompanying self...
On September 29, 2010, IMLS held a webinar to introduce museum professionals to its Museums, Libraries, and 21st Century Skills report and the accompanying self assessment tool.
Speakers included:
Mary Chute, IMLS Deputy Director for Libraries
Mary Boone, North Carolina State Librarian
Jeffrey Patchen, President and CEO of the Indianapolis Children’s Museum
Luis Herrera, San Francisco City Librarian
Webinar participants received:
Guidance for how to use the IMLS Museums, Libraries and 21st Century Skills Report and Self-Assessment Tool
Best practices and approaches to enhancing 21st century skills of audiences and stakeholders
Details for specific grant opportunities
Visit http://www.imls.gov/about/21st_century_skills_institution.aspx for more information and to access transcript.
https://wn.com/Museums,_Libraries,_And_21St_Century_Skills_Archived_Webinar
On September 29, 2010, IMLS held a webinar to introduce museum professionals to its Museums, Libraries, and 21st Century Skills report and the accompanying self assessment tool.
Speakers included:
Mary Chute, IMLS Deputy Director for Libraries
Mary Boone, North Carolina State Librarian
Jeffrey Patchen, President and CEO of the Indianapolis Children’s Museum
Luis Herrera, San Francisco City Librarian
Webinar participants received:
Guidance for how to use the IMLS Museums, Libraries and 21st Century Skills Report and Self-Assessment Tool
Best practices and approaches to enhancing 21st century skills of audiences and stakeholders
Details for specific grant opportunities
Visit http://www.imls.gov/about/21st_century_skills_institution.aspx for more information and to access transcript.
- published: 05 Aug 2014
- views: 539
2:42:10
2019 Summit on the Value of Galleries, libraries, Archives and Museums
Interpretation Disclaimer
“The interpretation between English and French is not intended to be used as a verbatim record or translation by any party as the in...
Interpretation Disclaimer
“The interpretation between English and French is not intended to be used as a verbatim record or translation by any party as the interpreted version is a live interpretation; the accuracy of the content cannot be assured. If an accurate record of the content is needed, a written translation from the original language should be undertaken, relying on the transcript of the original floor recording.”
https://wn.com/2019_Summit_On_The_Value_Of_Galleries,_Libraries,_Archives_And_Museums
Interpretation Disclaimer
“The interpretation between English and French is not intended to be used as a verbatim record or translation by any party as the interpreted version is a live interpretation; the accuracy of the content cannot be assured. If an accurate record of the content is needed, a written translation from the original language should be undertaken, relying on the transcript of the original floor recording.”
- published: 13 May 2019
- views: 568
35:01
Scaling Training for Tribal Archives, Libraries, and Museums + Public Libraries
Staff working in tribal archives, libraries, and museums (TALMs) have a pressing need for training to support digital stewardship of the unique cultural heritag...
Staff working in tribal archives, libraries, and museums (TALMs) have a pressing need for training to support digital stewardship of the unique cultural heritage materials in their care. Panelists will discuss online courses about digital stewardship developed specifically for TALMs and small public libraries, which center community values and needs.
Speakers: Mercy Procaccini (OCLC), Lotus Norton-Wisla (Digital & Community Outreach Archivist, Washington State University Center for Digital Scholarship and Curation), Selena Ortega-Chiolero (Museum Specialist, Chickaloon Village Traditional Council), Monique Tyndall (Director of Cultural Affairs, Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohicans)
* Download Presentation Slides: https://clir-dlf.box.com/s/8cyjyapahajr9sq932pg1m8kgxwi2ubf
* Download Presentation Transcript: https://clir-dlf.box.com/s/pct41rmwg94n7jzxf3e55a686uh90g8o
This presentation was a part of the 2021 DLF Forum, which took place online November 1-3, 2021.
About CLIR, DLF, and the DLF Forum:
CLIR’s DLF community works to advance research, learning, social justice, and the public good through the creative design and wise application of digital library technologies. Our annual conference, the DLF Forum (#DLFforum), brings together practitioners from digital libraries, archives, museums, and other technology-related fields of all types and sizes.
More about the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR): https://www.clir.org
More about the Digital Library Federation (DLF): https://www.diglib.org
More about the 2021 DLF Forum: https://www.forum2021.diglib.org
Join DLF: https://www.diglib.org/about/members/
https://wn.com/Scaling_Training_For_Tribal_Archives,_Libraries,_And_Museums_Public_Libraries
Staff working in tribal archives, libraries, and museums (TALMs) have a pressing need for training to support digital stewardship of the unique cultural heritage materials in their care. Panelists will discuss online courses about digital stewardship developed specifically for TALMs and small public libraries, which center community values and needs.
Speakers: Mercy Procaccini (OCLC), Lotus Norton-Wisla (Digital & Community Outreach Archivist, Washington State University Center for Digital Scholarship and Curation), Selena Ortega-Chiolero (Museum Specialist, Chickaloon Village Traditional Council), Monique Tyndall (Director of Cultural Affairs, Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohicans)
* Download Presentation Slides: https://clir-dlf.box.com/s/8cyjyapahajr9sq932pg1m8kgxwi2ubf
* Download Presentation Transcript: https://clir-dlf.box.com/s/pct41rmwg94n7jzxf3e55a686uh90g8o
This presentation was a part of the 2021 DLF Forum, which took place online November 1-3, 2021.
About CLIR, DLF, and the DLF Forum:
CLIR’s DLF community works to advance research, learning, social justice, and the public good through the creative design and wise application of digital library technologies. Our annual conference, the DLF Forum (#DLFforum), brings together practitioners from digital libraries, archives, museums, and other technology-related fields of all types and sizes.
More about the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR): https://www.clir.org
More about the Digital Library Federation (DLF): https://www.diglib.org
More about the 2021 DLF Forum: https://www.forum2021.diglib.org
Join DLF: https://www.diglib.org/about/members/
- published: 12 Jan 2022
- views: 115
1:21:38
Economics of Open Content: Archives, Museums, and Libraries (Part 2)
The archives, museums, and libraries panel continues with Howard Besser, Director of Moving Image Archiving and Preservation and Professor of Cinema Studies at ...
The archives, museums, and libraries panel continues with Howard Besser, Director of Moving Image Archiving and Preservation and Professor of Cinema Studies at New York University, describing work underway in moving-image and recorded-sound cataloging and preservation, and Ellen Dunlap, president of the American Antiquarian Society, describing the commercial relationships that this library has fostered for the past 50 years and how commerce and open content can work together. Sumir Meghani, Business Development Manager for Yahoo! Search, discusses commercial perspectives generally and Yahoo's stakes in particular in furthering open content by analyzing the new Open Content Alliance that Yahoo! has helped to launch.
Industry Study: The Economics of Open Archives, Museums, and Libraries
Howard Besser, New York UniversitybrEllen Dunlap, American Antiquarian Society
On January 23-24, 2006, Intelligent Television hosts the Economics of Open Content symposium at MIT to bring together representatives from media industries, cultural and educational institutions, and legal and business minds to discuss how to make open content happen better and faster.
With the support of the Hewlett Foundation and MIT Open Courseware, Intelligent Television brings representatives of commercial media industries (publishing, film, music, television, video, software, education/courseware, gaming) together with representatives of cultural and educational institutions who are innovative in this area and legal and business minds in the academy who are studying how to make this happen faster and better. New Yorker economics columnist and bestselling author (The Wisdom of Crowds) James Surowiecki keynotes at the Cambridge meeting, with a presentation entitled 'Openness as an Ethos.'
Intelligent Television has been conducting a year-long investigation into the economics of open content. This project is a systematic study of why and how it makes sense for commercial companies and noncommercial institutions active in culture, education, and media to make certain materials widely available for free, and also how free services are finding new (sometimes commercial) ways of becoming sustainable. The project builds upon written work that Intelligent Television recently completed with the support of the Mellon Foundation and Ithaka on Marketing Culture in the Digital Age, and also upon work now being completed as part of the Mellon Foundation-supported Commission on Cyberinfrastructure in the Humanities and Social Sciences. The project also informs new economic models that Intelligent Television is establishing for its documentary work.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
https://wn.com/Economics_Of_Open_Content_Archives,_Museums,_And_Libraries_(Part_2)
The archives, museums, and libraries panel continues with Howard Besser, Director of Moving Image Archiving and Preservation and Professor of Cinema Studies at New York University, describing work underway in moving-image and recorded-sound cataloging and preservation, and Ellen Dunlap, president of the American Antiquarian Society, describing the commercial relationships that this library has fostered for the past 50 years and how commerce and open content can work together. Sumir Meghani, Business Development Manager for Yahoo! Search, discusses commercial perspectives generally and Yahoo's stakes in particular in furthering open content by analyzing the new Open Content Alliance that Yahoo! has helped to launch.
Industry Study: The Economics of Open Archives, Museums, and Libraries
Howard Besser, New York UniversitybrEllen Dunlap, American Antiquarian Society
On January 23-24, 2006, Intelligent Television hosts the Economics of Open Content symposium at MIT to bring together representatives from media industries, cultural and educational institutions, and legal and business minds to discuss how to make open content happen better and faster.
With the support of the Hewlett Foundation and MIT Open Courseware, Intelligent Television brings representatives of commercial media industries (publishing, film, music, television, video, software, education/courseware, gaming) together with representatives of cultural and educational institutions who are innovative in this area and legal and business minds in the academy who are studying how to make this happen faster and better. New Yorker economics columnist and bestselling author (The Wisdom of Crowds) James Surowiecki keynotes at the Cambridge meeting, with a presentation entitled 'Openness as an Ethos.'
Intelligent Television has been conducting a year-long investigation into the economics of open content. This project is a systematic study of why and how it makes sense for commercial companies and noncommercial institutions active in culture, education, and media to make certain materials widely available for free, and also how free services are finding new (sometimes commercial) ways of becoming sustainable. The project builds upon written work that Intelligent Television recently completed with the support of the Mellon Foundation and Ithaka on Marketing Culture in the Digital Age, and also upon work now being completed as part of the Mellon Foundation-supported Commission on Cyberinfrastructure in the Humanities and Social Sciences. The project also informs new economic models that Intelligent Television is establishing for its documentary work.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
- published: 17 Apr 2014
- views: 137
59:37
Partnering for Public Impact: Archives, Libraries & Museums
This webinar was presented on October 30, 2014 as part of the CoSA Member Webinar Series.
This webinar was presented on October 30, 2014 as part of the CoSA Member Webinar Series.
https://wn.com/Partnering_For_Public_Impact_Archives,_Libraries_Museums
This webinar was presented on October 30, 2014 as part of the CoSA Member Webinar Series.
- published: 13 Apr 2016
- views: 25
1:09:10
Careers in Arts, History, Humanities, Museums, and Libraries
The Arts, History, Humanities & Culture Cluster of the White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity through Hist...
The Arts, History, Humanities & Culture Cluster of the White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity through Historically Black Colleges and Universities presented a webinar,
Exploring Career and Professional Development Opportunities in the Arts, Humanities, Museums, Libraries, and History Sectors on
Tuesday, February 1, 2022.
Participants learned about career/job opportunities in the arts, humanities, history, museum, and library space as well as the ways the federal government supports professional development for HBCU faculty and leadership working in these areas. Despite economic hardships faced by the sector during COVID-19, creative and cultural occupations and industries have a history of growth and resilience. During the session, participants heard from young professionals working in these fields as well as speakers from each field/agency citing recommended resources for internships, fellowships, and project work in these fields that students can be engaged in right now – to prepare for careers. The session discussed how to leverage valuable resources so that HBCU leadership and faculty can make this essential information available to their students, as well as indicating to HBCU leadership just how critical these areas are to a well-rounded education.
https://wn.com/Careers_In_Arts,_History,_Humanities,_Museums,_And_Libraries
The Arts, History, Humanities & Culture Cluster of the White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity through Historically Black Colleges and Universities presented a webinar,
Exploring Career and Professional Development Opportunities in the Arts, Humanities, Museums, Libraries, and History Sectors on
Tuesday, February 1, 2022.
Participants learned about career/job opportunities in the arts, humanities, history, museum, and library space as well as the ways the federal government supports professional development for HBCU faculty and leadership working in these areas. Despite economic hardships faced by the sector during COVID-19, creative and cultural occupations and industries have a history of growth and resilience. During the session, participants heard from young professionals working in these fields as well as speakers from each field/agency citing recommended resources for internships, fellowships, and project work in these fields that students can be engaged in right now – to prepare for careers. The session discussed how to leverage valuable resources so that HBCU leadership and faculty can make this essential information available to their students, as well as indicating to HBCU leadership just how critical these areas are to a well-rounded education.
- published: 21 Mar 2022
- views: 85
1:00:49
Museums and Archives Programming for a new normal
Presented by Mairead O'Rourke, CultureRunner
This video is a recording of our training session about museum and archives programming in "the new normal". It lo...
Presented by Mairead O'Rourke, CultureRunner
This video is a recording of our training session about museum and archives programming in "the new normal". It looks at the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and how museums and archives have responded to it. It discusses the challenges and opportunities presented by the pandemic, and what are they key considerations when trying to plan for an uncertain future. It also includes a case study from Hastings Museum.
Timestamps:
0:00 Introduction
1:10 Why are we here?
4:10 Case study - Hastings Museum
33:46 Culture and leisure services under lockdown
35:32 Impact of Covid-19
37:31 How can museums and archives respond to the issues created by Covid-19?
43:05 Examples of virtual offers
45:42 Challenges and opportunities
https://wn.com/Museums_And_Archives_Programming_For_A_New_Normal
Presented by Mairead O'Rourke, CultureRunner
This video is a recording of our training session about museum and archives programming in "the new normal". It looks at the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and how museums and archives have responded to it. It discusses the challenges and opportunities presented by the pandemic, and what are they key considerations when trying to plan for an uncertain future. It also includes a case study from Hastings Museum.
Timestamps:
0:00 Introduction
1:10 Why are we here?
4:10 Case study - Hastings Museum
33:46 Culture and leisure services under lockdown
35:32 Impact of Covid-19
37:31 How can museums and archives respond to the issues created by Covid-19?
43:05 Examples of virtual offers
45:42 Challenges and opportunities
- published: 02 Nov 2021
- views: 68
1:04:35
Historypin: Libraries, Archives & Museums Sharing Content
Nick Stanhope, CEO of We Are What We Do, the non-profit organization behind Historypin, the citizen historian platform created with Google as a way for people t...
Nick Stanhope, CEO of We Are What We Do, the non-profit organization behind Historypin, the citizen historian platform created with Google as a way for people to come together, from across different generations and cultures, to create and explore the history of their communities
Historypin (http://www.historypin.com/) is a way for millions of people
(and libraries, archives, and museums) to come together, from across
different generations, cultures, and places, to share small glimpses of
the past and to build up the huge story of human history. Historypin
is made up of photographic images, videos, audio clips, and descriptive
and narrative text that have been pinned directly to the Historypin map by users.
https://wn.com/Historypin_Libraries,_Archives_Museums_Sharing_Content
Nick Stanhope, CEO of We Are What We Do, the non-profit organization behind Historypin, the citizen historian platform created with Google as a way for people to come together, from across different generations and cultures, to create and explore the history of their communities
Historypin (http://www.historypin.com/) is a way for millions of people
(and libraries, archives, and museums) to come together, from across
different generations, cultures, and places, to share small glimpses of
the past and to build up the huge story of human history. Historypin
is made up of photographic images, videos, audio clips, and descriptive
and narrative text that have been pinned directly to the Historypin map by users.
- published: 26 Jun 2012
- views: 897